Uber sues New York City over ‘reckless’ driver protection law

Summary

  • Uber says New York City law shields dangerous drivers and fraudsters
  • Law slated to take effect on July 28
  • New York City reviewing Uber’s complaint
  • Uber faces ​3,571 lawsuits over driver conduct

NEW YORK, (Reuters) – Uber Technologies sued New York City to ‌block enforcement of a new law that it said would unconstitutionally force it to keep drivers it does not want on its platform.

In a complaint filed late on Tuesday night, Uber said the law against “wrongful deactivations” would improperly shield drivers who ​engage in dangerous, threatening or other inappropriate behavior, threatening public safety and causing “immediate and irreparable harm” by ​undermining the company’s reputation and goodwill.

It said the law violates its free-speech and due-process ⁠rights under the U.S. Constitution, as well as New York’s state constitution. Uber is seeking a permanent ​injunction plus costs.

A spokesman for New York City’s law department said on Wednesday it is reviewing the complaint, which ​Uber filed in Manhattan federal court.

Local Law 52 of 2026 would generally prevent large ride-sharing companies such as Uber and Lyft from dismissing drivers absent a “bona fide economic reason” or “just cause.”

Dismissals would be permitted for account sharing, fraud, and “egregious misconduct” such as ​violence, sexual harassment or assault, and discrimination.

The law is slated to take effect on July 28, following ​a 46-5 City Council vote in January.

“This Council stands with workers and will continue to fight to ensure all app-based drivers ‌have ⁠basic due process protections,” Speaker Julie Menin and Council Member Shekar Krishnan, the law’s main sponsor, said in a joint statement.

UBER WARNS OF ‘KANGAROO’ PROCEEDINGS

Uber objected to being required to give 14 days’ notice before deactivations, saying this gave drivers a window for “retaliation” against passengers, and having to potentially rehire drivers from as early as 2019 ​who did not receive such ​notice.

It said the law ⁠violates passengers’ privacy by requiring they disclose reports of alleged abuse to accused drivers.

The San Francisco-based company also accused New York City of encouraging “kangaroo” proceedings requiring judges, ​arbitrators and Department of Consumer and Worker Protection officials to assume that deactivations ​are unjust, and ⁠shifting the burden to Uber to prove otherwise.

“We are suing New York City to block a reckless new law that seeks to strip our ability to immediately remove potentially dangerous drivers and fraudsters from our platform, creating an ⁠immediate threat ​to public safety,” Uber said in a statement.

As of June 1, ​Uber faced 3,571 lawsuits in nationwide litigation in San Francisco federal court accusing drivers of sexual misconduct.

Lyft did not immediately respond to requests ​for comment on its legal plans.

Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Matthew Lewis and David Gregorio