Rideshare Drivers Staging One-Day Strike in LA, Other Cities

Rideshare Drivers Staging One-Day Strike in LA, Other Cities
A ride share driver participates in a protest by drivers and their supporters at Los Angeles International Airport in Los Angeles, Calif. on Aug. 20, 2020. (Robyn Beck/AFP via Getty Images)
City News Service
7/21/2021
Updated:
7/21/2021

LOS ANGELES, Calif.—People looking to use ride-hailing services such as Lyft and Uber might be in for some difficulty July 21, as many drivers are conducting a one-day strike for better pay and status under the law.

Rideshare Drivers United—an independent association of U.S. rideshare drivers founded in Los Angeles—is organizing the strikes in a number of cities across the United States, including Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco,  Austin, Boston, Cleveland, Las Vegas, Pittsburgh, Denver, and Baltimore.

The group scheduled a 1 p.m. rally near Los Angeles International Airport.

They said the companies have reduced mileage rates, lowered commissions, taken away flexibility and transparency;  continue to exploit workers by manipulating algorithms; broken promises of Prop 22.

Prop 22, passed by California voters in November 2020, allows ride-hailing companies to avoid classifying drivers as employees.

Rideshare Drivers United is also calling for the passage of the PRO Act, short for Protecting the Right to Organize, which would expand protections for workers seeking to unionize. It passed the House of Representatives and has the support of President Joe Biden.

Representatives for Uber did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

On its website, Lyft praises Prop 22 for allowing rideshare drivers in California to work “under a new model that gives them historic new benefits and protections: a healthcare stipend of up to $4,800 per year, workplace injury protections, and a minimum earnings guarantee, all while ensuring that drivers keep what they want most: flexibility and independence.”