Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Kater Seeks Southern B.C. Ride-Hail Licenses By Winter, Rest Of B.C. By 2020

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Sep, 2019 08:56 PM

    VANCOUVER - Ride-hailing company Kater Technologies says it has officially applied for a licence that would allow it to operate in every region of British Columbia.

     

    A statement from the company says B.C. is one of the last areas of North America without ride-hailing and the province now has an opportunity to introduce the service in the "right way."

     

    Kater CEO Scott Larson says the company hopes to launch operations across Metro Vancouver, Victoria, Nanaimo and the Okanagan by this winter, with operations in other B.C. regions rolling out over the next 12 months.

     

    Kater is also proposing a system of pricing that would slide from a minimum of 90 per cent of current taxi rates to a maximum of 200 per cent, a range it says addresses consumer concerns about prices rising when demand is higher.

     

    Transportation Minister Claire Trevena said last week that eight ride-hailing companies, including Uber, had filed licence applications with the Passenger Transportation Branch of her ministry.

     

    A coalition of nine Vancouver taxi companies has asked the B.C. Supreme Court to quash policies it says were illegally created for ride-hailing, arguing binding guidelines for ride-hailing services should not have been set before individual applications were heard.

     

    Kater's goal is to serve growing consumer demand while improving "inherent downsides" linked to other ride-hailing providers, Larson says in the statement.

     

    The company says it will include approximately 250 wheelchair accessible vehicles in its network and will also use location-based pricing and driver incentives to encourage Kater drivers not to abandon suburban service during peak hours.

     

    "Assuming that the Passenger Transportation Board approves our pricing model, our drivers are projected to earn at least $25 for every hour that they are active on the Kater platform," says the statement.

    Kater addresses congestion and pollution concerns by pledging that no more than 2,000 of its cars will be on the road at any given time.

     

    Its statement says it also intends to integrate taxis into its operating platform, a move the company says will support the taxi services already in operation.

     

    The coalition of Vancouver taxi companies has said new provincial ride-hailing rules amount to "destructive competition" because they allow so-called transportation network services to offer an unlimited number of vehicles in broader geographic areas compared with cabs.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Indian Exchange Student Drowns In Kamloops River, RCMP Recover Body

    Kamloops RCMP say the body of a 23-year-old Indian exchange student has been recovered after the man was swept away in the North Thompson River on Friday morning.

    Indian Exchange Student Drowns In Kamloops River, RCMP Recover Body

    Former Liberal MP Darshan Kang Apologizes For Harassment, Insists Intentions Were 'Honourable'

    Former Liberal MP Darshan Kang Apologizes For Harassment, Insists Intentions Were 'Honourable'
    But reading from a prepared statement, Darshan Kang also maintains that neither his intention nor his actions were improper.

    Former Liberal MP Darshan Kang Apologizes For Harassment, Insists Intentions Were 'Honourable'

    Major Housing Development Planned On Indigenous Land In Heart Of Vancouver

    Major Housing Development Planned On Indigenous Land In Heart Of Vancouver
    The Squamish Nation councillor, who also goes by the name Dustin Rivers, is standing on a pinched triangle of reserve land near the city's centre that the First Nation won back in 2002 after decades of legal battles.

    Major Housing Development Planned On Indigenous Land In Heart Of Vancouver

    Systemic Change Needed To Address Suicide Among Physicians In Canada: Doctors

    Tulk, who completed her residency in family medicine at McMaster University in Hamilton saw a system that was failing resilient people wired to succeed through hard work and a competitive drive — before they became victims of burnout.

    Systemic Change Needed To Address Suicide Among Physicians In Canada: Doctors

    Seven Candidates Run For MP's Job In B.C.'s Nanaimo-Ladysmith Byelection

    NANAIMO, B.C. — Voters are heading to the polls to elect a member of Parliament in the British Columbia riding of Nanaimo-Ladysmith today in what could be an indicator of the October federal election.    

    Seven Candidates Run For MP's Job In B.C.'s Nanaimo-Ladysmith Byelection

    Green Party Targets Use Of Tax Money For Political Attack Billboards

    VANCOUVER — Green party Leader Andrew Weaver is calling for a ban on the use of taxpayer money for political attack ads after the B.C. Liberals bought billboards blaming Premier John Horgan for a spike in gas prices.

    Green Party Targets Use Of Tax Money For Political Attack Billboards