Supreme Court of B.C. asked to order ride-hailing companies off the road
Credit to Author: David Carrigg| Date: Tue, 28 Jan 2020 02:55:35 +0000
Uber and Lyft could be off the road as soon as next Tuesday if the Supreme Court of B.C. agrees to issue an injunction in favour of the Vancouver Taxi Association.
Association lawyer Peter Gall the court would be asked on Feb. 4 to issue an injunction against the Passenger Transportation Board’s ride-hailing rules, while the court reviews a legal petition filed by the association on Monday.
Gall said the association believed the regulatory board has given ride-hail companies an advantage over taxi companies by — among other things — not imposing any fleet size restrictions.
He said the board is not allowed to issue any licence unless “it promotes sound economic conditions.”
“The Passenger Transportation Board has to determine in advance what the impact will be on issuing licences on different terms than taxis,” Gall said. “Taxis are saying we are restricted as to numbers, we are restricted as to price.”
In Aug. 2018, the board set out conditions under which ride-hailing could operate, then asked ride-hailing businesses to apply for permission to operate. Under those rules, there can be an unlimited number of ride-hailing cars and ride-hailing operators will be able to charge what the market will bear, but with a minimum price.
Ride-hailing was launched in Metro Vancouver on Friday, but the City of Surrey is already trying to force them out by threatening fines for not having a city business licence.
Surrey mayor Doug McCallum said ride-hailing should not be rolled out while there are legal cases in play. However, he said the city would not challenge ride-hailing in court.