Uber Technologies and Lyft Inc declined to appear on Wednesday at a U.S. House of Representatives hearing on issues relating to the ride-hailing industry, a congressional committee said.

The two ride-hailing companies had been asked to appear as part
of a House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee inquiry on safety and
labor
practices as lawmakers seek to prepare legislation that will impact the
industry.
“Their failure to appear at this hearing is a telling sign that
they would rather suffer a public lashing than answer questions on the record
about their operations,” the head of the panel, U.S. Representative Peter
DeFazio, a Democrat, said in his prepared remarks.
DeFazio added that the hearing “should also serve also a wake-up
call to the companies that have flooded our roadways with disruptive
technologies and investor capital that their days of operating with little
public policy and regulatory oversight in the transportation space are coming
to an end.”
He raised a number of issues, from safety to congestion to wages
of drivers.
“Perhaps they don’t want to talk about what their model is doing
to drive down wages and turn our transportation workforce from a skilled,
trained pool of workers earning living wages to another casualty of the gig
economy,” DeFazio said.
Earlier this week, he urged the companies’ chief executives in a
letter to participate in the inquiry even as Uber and Lyft directed lawmakers
to third-party industry associations.
DeFazio added “the tenuous existence of Uber and Lyft is
literally fueled by millions of independent contractors who see their take home
pay reduced drastically – below minimum wage in some states - as they are made
to pay fees collected by the company, self-employment taxes, and costs
associated with operating and maintaining their vehicles.”
He said the companies, which have reported substantial losses,
“don’t make information about their process for deactivating dangerous drivers
public. They don’t share data on the prevalence of assaults on their platforms.
They don’t reveal details on how drivers are paid. What we do know is that both
these companies are struggling since going public... Clearly, this business
model is not sustainable.
Uber on Monday confirmed it had received DeFazio’s request.
- Reuters
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