Uber appeals to court in battle with home state on status of drivers

Ride hailing firm and competitor Lyft are seeking to place a court order granting drivers employee status and health benefits on hold

epa08600227 An ad for an Uber pickup station is seen at the Los Angeles International Airport in Los Angeles, California, USA, 12 August 2020. According to media reports, Uber is considering shuttering operations in California if forced to classify its drivers as employees. Drivers for the ride-hailing service are currently classified as independent contractors. A recent Superior Court ruling demanded the company classify its drivers as employees, as the current classification excludes them from access to workers compensation and health care benefits. Uber has filed an appeal against the ruling.  EPA/CHRISTIAN MONTERROSA
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Uber Technologies joined competitor Lyft in asking an appeals court for an extended reprieve on converting California drivers to employees after both companies warned that a rapid overhaul of their business models may force them to suspend operations in their home state.

The ride-hailing firms are trying to buy time after a San Francisco judge issued an order on August 10 that upends their business model and may require them to provide hundreds of thousands of drivers with benefits including health insurance and overtime that could cost billions of dollars.

The trial judge who issued the injunction against Uber and Lyft refused on August 13 to keep the order on hold beyond August 20 while the companies challenge it. The appeals process could take years in a case that threatens the contractor-based model used across the gig industry.

The companies are campaigning for a ballot measure set for a statewide vote in November that would exempt app-based transportation and delivery companies from the law known as Assembly Bill 5.

Uber filed its request to the state appeals court on Saturday, saying there is a “looming crisis” if the court doesn’t put an extended hold on the August 10 order.

“The consequences to drivers and the public from the impending shutdown will be catastrophic,” Uber said in the filing. “Hundreds of thousands of drivers – the vast majority of whom do not want to be ‘employees’ – will see their earning opportunities on the rides app disappear.”