Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Quebec Taxi Industry Seeks Injunction Against Uber

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Feb, 2016 11:47 AM
    MONTREAL — Quebec's taxi industry went to court Tuesday to seek a permanent injunction against Uber that is also aimed at deactivating the company's app throughout the province.
     
    Uber's drivers are breaking the law and the company's services are illegal, lawyer Marc-Antoine Cloutier told a news conference outside the Montreal courthouse.
     
    The drivers don't need a permit, as required by the law, he argued.
     
    Benoit Jugand, a taxi-industry spokesman, urged the Quebec government to start cracking down on Uber.
     
    "It's not normal that the industry must take care of what's supposed to be done by the government," he said. "It's simple: taxi is legal and Uber is illegal. The law says it. The law is clear. We simply want the law to be applied."
     
     
    Jugand and Cloutier both said Uber's service has nothing in common with the practice of people giving their neighbours a lift into work free of charge.
     
    "Ride-sharing is well-defined with the transportation law," Jugand said. "It says you need to share transport but you just share your gas. But giving calls to somebody who's taking you from point A to point B is clearly taxi business."
     
    The controversy surrounding Uber has raged across the country, with Edmonton city council approving a bylaw last week that would allow it and similar companies to operate legally.
     
    The bylaw takes effect March 1 and includes two licences: one for firms called private transportation providers and the other for taxis.
     
     
    Uber trips are not eligible under the insurance plans that cover licensed taxi rides, and opponents describe this as only one among many safety risks associated with the practice.
     
    Uber, in turn, argues that developing a mobile app that lets customers hail nearby cars makes it a technology company rather than a transportation firm.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Air India Perjurer Inderjit Singh Reyat Granted Release To Halfway House

    Air India Perjurer Inderjit Singh Reyat Granted Release To Halfway House
    Inderjit Singh Reyat was charged with perjury in 2006 for repeatedly lying during his testimony at the trial into the bombing deaths of 331 people, mostly Canadians

    Air India Perjurer Inderjit Singh Reyat Granted Release To Halfway House

    Canada Urged To Lead Fight Against United Nations Peacekeeper Sex Abuse

    Canada Urged To Lead Fight Against United Nations Peacekeeper Sex Abuse
    Developing countries such as Bangladesh, India and Pakistan have become the leading contributors of troops to peacekeeping missions since the passing of Canada's heyday in the 1990s.  

    Canada Urged To Lead Fight Against United Nations Peacekeeper Sex Abuse

    Turbulence Appears On The Rise, And Airlines Need Better Detection: Researcher

    Turbulence Appears On The Rise, And Airlines Need Better Detection: Researcher
    Extreme turbulence of the kind that injured seven people on a flight diverted to Newfoundland on Sunday appears on the rise, and airlines need improved technologies to detect it, according to a British researcher

    Turbulence Appears On The Rise, And Airlines Need Better Detection: Researcher

    James Forcillo Case Reveals Shifting Attitude Toward Cops' Dealing With Those In Crisis

    James Forcillo Case Reveals Shifting Attitude Toward Cops' Dealing With Those In Crisis
    A guilty finding against a Toronto police officer who gunned down a knife-wielding teen on an empty streetcar suggests the public has become more sensitive toward how police deal with those in crisis, some experts said Tuesday.

    James Forcillo Case Reveals Shifting Attitude Toward Cops' Dealing With Those In Crisis

    Murder Conviction Upheld For Former B.C. Mountie Keith Wiens In Shooting Of Common-Law Wife

    Murder Conviction Upheld For Former B.C. Mountie Keith Wiens In Shooting Of Common-Law Wife
    He was fighting both the conviction and a 13-year minimum sentence before parole eligibility for the August 2011 shooting of 55-year-old Lynn Kalmring in the couple's Penticton home.

    Murder Conviction Upheld For Former B.C. Mountie Keith Wiens In Shooting Of Common-Law Wife

    B.C. Man Charged With Animal Cruelty After Dog's Collar Embedded In Neck

    B.C. Man Charged With Animal Cruelty After Dog's Collar Embedded In Neck
    The SPCA responded to a call last February about a tethered young pit-bull cross in distress on Daniel Elliott's property near Ladysmith, B.C.

    B.C. Man Charged With Animal Cruelty After Dog's Collar Embedded In Neck