New Orleans Uber Drivers Let Riders Hail Illegally on Street, Say Cabbies
New Orleans taxi drivers say competitors with ridesharing service Uber illegally let passengers hail them on the street.
In papers filed this week in Orleans Parish Civil District Court,The Times-Picayune reported that 26 taxi drivers allege illegal acts by UberX drivers. The cabbies aren’t suing the San Francisco company itself.
The city’s ordinance states drivers for companies such as Uber and Lyft can’t accept passengers unless requested through company apps. Cabbies say drivers routinely allow people to flag them down on the street in exchange for cash. One evening, plaintiffs say they documented four street hails in a little over an hour.
The taxi drivers earlier alleged UberX drivers illegally work without chauffer’s licenses.
Related:
- Cabbies in Louisiana Parish Sue UberX Drivers
- Uber Ads Lie About Superior Safety California, Cabbies Say
- Cabbies at San Jose Airport Strike in Protest of Ridesharing
- Uber vs. Taxi Clash Heats Up at Massachusetts Statehouse
- Boston Taxi Owner Suit Latest Legal Salvo in Rideshare Wars
- Truckers Who Fail English Tests Are Pulled Off Roads in Crackdown
- Chubb, The Hartford, Liberty and Travelers Team Up on Surety Tech Launch
- One of Highest Property Claims Severity Recorded in Q3 on Low Volume, Says Verisk
- Hartford: 10-Year Analysis Shows Shifts in Common, Expensive Small-Business Claims