Raleigh Cabbies to Strike on New Year's Eve

Passengers in Raleigh, North Carolina, and nearby towns may have no choice but to use a ride sharing service tonight, because more than half of the cab drivers in the area have reportedly decided to go on strike. Reports WRAL.com:
Iyman Massoud, a cab driver who says he represents a group of about 650 local taxi drivers, says they are protesting that Uber drivers are not subject to the same licensing, registration and insurance fees as taxi cab drivers. This allows Uber drivers to charge less, creating what Massoud says is unfair competition….
"People are just suffering," said Elmutaz Adloa, a cab driver. "They cannot make a living out of this industry."
Uber is, of course, the top ride sharing service, which allow customers to use smartphone apps to summon drivers in their personal cars to take them to their destinations. The company also lets prospective drivers, after undergoing background checks and a checklist of other precautions, earn money ferrying customers around while retaining control over the hours and conditions under which they work.
Labor activists have long used work stoppages to pressure employers and government officials to agree to their demands. It would seem, however, that the tactic would be most effective when the workers are close to irreplaceable—not as a method of protesting a competitor that has already shown itself to be a superior alternative to the service offered by the striking workers.
This doesn't mean that no Raleigh customers will be inconvenienced tonight. To try to meet the increased demand for rides on New Year's Eve (and the leftover demand for rides from people who can no longer find a taxi) Uber will need to entice more of its drivers onto the roads. The company has a built-in mechanism for doing just that, but it involves "surge pricing," or hiking prices on busy nights, a practice that has earned Uber the ire of some passengers. The article explains:
While ride-sharing companies usually charge less than taxis, Uber came under fire in the Triangle for a price surge on Halloween, including charging one man more than $400 for a 15-mile trip from Durham to Chapel Hill.
Will people sour on Uber after experiencing dramatically increased prices tonight? Or will they lay the fault on traditional cab drivers, who almost literally had one job, and who are choosing not to offer any rides at any price?
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
It would seem, however, that the tactic would be most effective when the workers are close to irreplaceable?not as a method of protesting a competitor that has already shown itself to be a superior alternative to the service offered by the striking workers.
Are domesticated cats smarter than feral ones?
They're less prone to try to claw my eyes out, which makes me less liable to shoot them.
*note - I have never needed to shoot a cat to defend my eyesight. Lesser mesures have always worked in the past.
Well that explains why you failed the law enforcement entrance exam.
I almost ended up as a computer forensic investigator, but balked at the interview question regarding working on child porn cases. By contrast being a meta bureaucrat is less disturbing and pays more. (Forensic Investigators make less than troopers for some reason, despite their higher educational and skills requirements)
Well that's an easy question to answer.... Forensics investigators do not generate revenue
I had a rescued feral feline and that was probably the smartest cat I've ever had.
I've pretty much use Uber unless there happens to be a cab waiting right at my location. So far that's a record 9-1 for uber. Also the current rate is about 47% of a cab. I fear they will eventually come into co-existence with the current cab cartels, and end up strengthening the protective cartels.
What happens when they throw a strike and no one notices?
Some of the cabbies start thinking "hrmm, what if I became an Uber driver insead"?
I've been encouraging some of them to start moonlighting in that direction. Many don't even own their cab, and definitely don't own the carriage license.
Shut up, Mimsy!!
Uber will feast tonight, then.
Well played, cabbies. Well. Played.
Betcha some of those cabbies will moonlight tonight as Uber drivers to pick up some sweet surge pricing.
my best friend's step-sister makes $76 hourly on the internet . She has been fired from work for five months but last month her check was $15869 just working on the internet for a few hours. have a peek at this web-site..........
????? http://www.netjob70.com
Oh, that's delicious. They don't realize they're shooting themselves in the foot.
The ingrained stupidity of entrenched monopolies never fails to amuse.
The cabbies are joining with the NYPD to demonstrate their degree of irrelevancy.
Are these taxi drivers taking protest lessons from the anti-theocracy Iranian politicians? "We're so mad we're quitting so the people we're opposed to can take over 100% of the government!"