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OUR UNION HAS SUED TO STOP TLC FROM DESTROYING DRIVER INCOME WITH UNLIMITED CARS!  


NYTWA and members, Amara Sanogo (Uber driver) and Richard Chow (yellow cab driver) have filed for a Temporary Restraining Order and Preliminary Injunction to stop TLC's reckless and unlawful plan to flood the streets with an unlimited number of EVs overnight destroying the incomes of all drivers!  


Some insurance brokers report as many as 20,000 new cars are expected to hit the streets. Meanwhile, the city has only 24 public charging stations - of which only 1 is in the Bronx. Some financing terms for new EVs are as high as 24% interest rate with 75 month terms - leaving drivers desperate to leave renting with still high costs and in deep debt. On top of that, trips for Uber and Lyft drivers are down by over 11% compared to before COVID and down by 50% for yellow cabs. With unlimited number of more cars, each driver will have even less trips. Meanwhile, the TLC lifted the cap after changing the rules so Uber and Lyft could leave each driver more empty and, up to a certain threshold, still not have to pay drivers more to make up for the loss of trips.


TLC did not limit the plates to renters who want to buy or to just individuals. Corporations including companies like investor-backed Revel can buy as many as they want. TLC has no plan to help drivers who want to keep renting. And they are squeezing out car owners who bought their new car over the last couple of years with pressure to buy a new expensive EV out of fear of not getting trips from Uber and Lyft. Deactivated drivers will lose any real chance of getting their jobs back; and the companies will have more leverage to increase deactivations and, as they have said in the past, start log-offs with oversaturation. 


Meanwhile hundreds of yellow cab owner-drivers still have high medallion debt with personal guarantees and 4K taxis are on the shelf, paying for the medallion mortgage with not one penny of income; liveries, greencabs and black cars are barely surviving. And all drivers are facing down MTA's Congestion Pricing plans! 


RENTERS WHO WANT TO OWN; DRIVERS WHO WANT TO KEEP RENTING; AND ALL CURRENT ACTIVE DRIVERS DESERVE A DIGNIFIED JOB!


The TLC did not even have the decency to hold a public hearing to hear from us! We will not let the TLC trap, divide or destroy us! WE NEED REAL SOLUTIONS FOR ALL DRIVERS!  


Stay tuned! We will hold a Zoom meeting for full updates and discussion once we hear back from the courts on our TRO request. 


To see the legal documents, NYTWA v Do: https://bit.ly/40ss1UP


NYTWA’s complaint to the Attorney General resulted in $328 million in wage theft recovery for Uber and Lyft drivers who had the cost of the sales tax and BCF surcharge taken out of their incomes between 2014 to 2017. When Uber sued to block the drivers’ raise in 2022, we organized three strikes until victory! In 2021, we had a 45-days 24/7 camp outside City Hall for medallion owner debt forgiveness, including 15-days hunger strike. Since 2018, we have petitioned the TLC repeatedly for a cap on FHV rental and financing rates; and today our organizing led to the introduction of a City Council bill to stop unfair deactivations by Uber and Lyft and a bill to require e-hail companies pay yellow and green cab drivers the metered rate. Now, with this lawsuit, we are fighting to protect all drivers from losing hard-earned income and a real solution for FHV renters and car-owners.


Join the union that fights and wins.

Rally to PROTECT OUR

FULL TIME JOBS

Wednesday, November 15th at 1pm

City Hall (Broadway and Murray)


  • Stop TLC from Flooding the Streets with More Cars
  • Demand Protection for Renters and Car Owners Facing High Rents/Financing + Fair Pathway for Those Who Want Plates
  • Pass bill 1078 to End Unfair Deactivations
  • Pass bill 1079 to stop low pay for yellow/green cabs in ehail trips


Our $328 Million Victory! 


Last week we won our campaign to win back the money Uber and Lyft took from drivers for the cost of the BCF surcharge and sales tax, as Attorney General Leticia James announced a settlement with both companies to pay back drivers! NYTWA brought the complaint to the AG, thousands of drivers participated in the campaign, we filed our own lawsuits and worked for this win for 8.5 years!


What NYTWA Won In This Settlement: $328 million of stolen wages for Uber + Lyft drivers + One week of paid sick leave + Minimum pay standards across NY State!

  

How It Will Work 

TLC drivers who worked for Uber between Nov 10, 2014 - May 22, 2017 and for Lyft between October 11, 2015 - July 31, 2017 will receive monies based on what was stolen from you during that time. It does not matter if you were deactivated, or no longer work for Uber or Lyft, or even if you moved out of the country. 


All drivers will automatically get a letter, text message, email from Rust Consulting (settlement administrator hired by Attorney General). Drivers will fill out a short form to verify your information for payment. You do not have to do anything right now. Absolutely no driver should pay one penny to anyone to receive the Attorney General settlement regarding Uber/Lyft wage theft! You do not need a lawyer!


After the letters start to go out, if you do not get any communication, please come to the union office. NYTWA will also work with families of drivers who've since passed away.  


For more info on our historic wage theft victory visit our website: https://www.nytwa.org/uberandlyftwagetheft

A legal battle emerges over the city’s new electric vehicle licenses


by CAROLINE SPIVACK | 11/06/23


The Adams administration suddenly lifted a cap last month on the number of electric Uber and Lyft vehicles allowed on New York City streets. The effect could be to clog the city’s streets with an unlimited number of new cars and would have “a disastrous impact” on drivers’ incomes, claims a lawsuit filed late last week by the New York Taxi Workers Alliance.


Officials with the city’s Taxi and Limousine Commission said in October that they would make electric vehicle licenses indefinitely available to qualified applicants. But the Taxi Workers Alliance argues that the agency failed to properly consult the industry and is asking a judge to kill the policy change.


Bhairavi Desai, president of the alliance, told Crain’s that she fears new licenses could ultimately make it harder for drivers to earn a living while the administration encourages cabbies to invest in electric vehicles that rely on the city’s current scatter of chargers.


“Flooding the streets with vehicles again is going to be disruptive for every single driver, including drivers who spend tens of thousands of dollars to buy vehicles that there’s not even enough infrastructure for,” said Desai. 


“This feels more like a trap than an opportunity.”


The lawsuit contends that lifting the cap on electric vehicle rideshares effectively “dismantles the guardrails” of a 2018 cap put in place by the City Council and then-Mayor Bill de Blasio to prevent market oversaturation and gridlock.


An exemption for electric vehicles existed from 2019 to 2021, but the TLC ended that carve-out after electric mobility company Revel used it to scale up its fleet of bright-blue electric taxis.


TLC Commissioner David Do, since taking over at the agency in 2022, has emphasized the need for electrification. The commission took a major step to embrace clean-energy cars last month by requiring New York’s fleet of 78,000 Uber and Lyft vehicles to transition to either zero-emission or wheelchair-accessible rides by 2030.


In light of those targets, the Taxi Workers Alliance argues that electric vehicles are “becoming the dominant mandated option in the industry” and that the “lifting of the cap on EV FHV licenses is, in reality, the lifting of any meaningful license limitation, full stop.”


Do said at the time of the announcement last month that new electric vehicle licenses stand to benefit drivers and the city at large. Do doubled-down on those arguments in a Monday statement to Crain’s.


“Resuming the issuance of EV licenses not only has long term benefits for our environment, but also drivers who have been stuck in predatory leasing arrangements,” Do said. “It’s a shame that NYTWA leadership would try to derail progress that improves our air, expands our charging infrastructure, and puts more money into drivers’ pockets.”


The TLC contends that the new licenses create a path for individual drivers to potentially avoid renting a licensed vehicle from a company that could subject them to onerous lending terms. The first newly awarded electric vehicle license was obtained by Lazizjon Negmatullaev, a TLC-licensed driver, who according to the agency said that he had previously leased a car for $900 a week and now is able to own his own vehicle by paying $400 a week.


As of Monday—less than a month from relaxing the cap—the TLC said it has received 1,200 applications for for-hire vehicle licenses restricted to electric vehicles. Of those, 1,114 applications were filed by individual divers and 86 were requested by corporations. TLC officials have approved nine of the new licenses so far, with others in the pipeline.


Currently, there are about 25,000 less TLC-licensed vehicles on the city’s streets compared to when the licensing pause took effect, according to the city. The dip in vehicles on the road is largely due to the taxi medallion crisis and the lingering impacts of Covid-19 on the industry.


But new analysis from transportation policy analyst Charles Komanoff, filed in an affidavit in support of the Taxi Workers’ lawsuit, also raises questions about the impact of a potential swell of new licenses.


Permitting a hypothetical 5,000 more rideshare vehicles could increase congestion, contribute to pollution, and lead to more traffic crashes, according to Komanoff’s analysis. The increase could cost New Yorkers $200 million annually in lost productivity due to traffic, Komanoff projected.


The lawsuit urges the TLC to conduct an environmental review before opening the door to new licenses. In his analysis, Komanoff slammed the TLC for a lack of transparency.


“I saw no analysis, modeling or other material reflecting the considerable impacts I have noted,” Komanoff wrote. “Perhaps the commission imagined that the public wouldn't notice, or perhaps it simply assumes that increasing the number of vehicles operating in New York City will be benign so long as the vehicles are powered by electricity rather than petrol.”


Desai said she expects an initial hearing on the lawsuit to take place as soon as this Wednesday.

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