Philadelphia's Parking Authority Used Citizen Fines to Help Keep Citizens From Using Uber
Citizens in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, who might want to use Uber or Lyft on their own and the companies' terms are getting stymied by their own money, in the form of strong political opposition from the city's Parking Authority (PPA), who have used up to half a million (much of it from parking and other vehicle violation tickets) to pay a firm that has lobbied against Uber and Lyft's attempts to operate freely in the city. (The rest of the state of Pennsylvania has given them a two-year legal status.)
Various colluding emails from back in 2014 when the state was first regulating Uber (and did, but Philadelphia carved out an exception for itself) between the PPA and taxi lobbying interests are detailed in this report by William Bender from the Philadelphia Inquirer.
An Uber spokesman explained to Bender that the legitimate safety concerns, such as background checks and insurance, are already dealt with between Uber and its drivers. Said Matt Wing: "The only difference is the PPA doesn't get to collect the fees associated with them, which means less money for them to spend on lobbyists." (Uber, as it often does, is openly operating in violation of the law in Philadelphia.

As the Philadelphia Inquirer editorialized against the PPA's machinations, the agency is:
effectively using parking fines and other revenue collected from those who live, work, and travel in the city to limit the same public's transportation options. The newspaper obtained emails showing that Parking Authority officials colluded with cab companies to mount the lobbying effort and even to set up ride-share drivers in sting operations.
The report proved what had appeared to be true for some time: that the Parking Authority has formed an unholy alliance with the taxi industry it supposedly regulates to work in their mutual interest - and against the public's - to stifle competition.
The PPA collects millions a year in taxi medallion and other taxi-related fees, so it has some interest in keeping the industry alive against technologically savvy and more useful competition.
In a Philadelphia Inquirer op-ed, Vince Fenerty, executive director of the PPA, insists it is motivated entirely by a concern for public safety and a level playing field, and fends off accusations of harassing Uber for the benefit of existing regulated taxi interests by pointing out the Authority regulates taxis themselves in a way that they often fight again.
My 2014 feature on the long regulatory fight across the nation of these ridehail app services.
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
Food trucks are definitely "out" "not" "cold" yesterday's news.
That guy standing in the back looking sheepish in the photo of this municipal corruption? Yep, union official. Funny that.
Remember, folks, there's no such thing as regulatory capture.
Oh gummint, don't ever change.
Wait, actually please do.
Filthadelphia's Parking Authority, like the city itself, is rotten to the core. They used to (probably still do) send parking tickets to random Pennsylvanians (including yours truly) in the hopes of gathering easy revenue from people too busy to fight it. I call upon my Keystone State brethren to push that whole garbage pile over the border into New Jerksey. They deserve each other.
West Joisy.
Undoubtedly your random tickets are just a product of abject incompetence:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QspxqCgfo2Q
Well, you can hardly blame them. Uber and Lyft, or their descendants, will make taxis as obsolete as the house and buggy. And if that happens, then the PPA looses money, power, and most importantly, the reason for a large percentage of their staff. If other industries can use government to protect their jobs, why can't government workers use government to protect their jobs? It's only fair.
And man, are those houses obsolete!
That's why 65 of them burned down, after the police fire-bombed only one.
And I hate to say it, but they may actually be having an effect. Uber of course doesn't have to disclose it's finances, and this is anecdotal, but my dad drives for Uber in NYC as his retirement job, and there has been a noticeable drop in riders since the summer. And now Uber has just cut their rates, AND increased the cut that they're taking from drivers to 25%. In real numbers, he used to average around $1100 weekly for about 30 hours of work -- now he's lucky if he breaks $750 with 40+ hours of work.
Cutting rates to increase ridership while cutting driver percentages isn't really a sign that Uber sees it's position in NYC as tenable.
Just fwiw - but it's some interesting reading and the guy sources his stuff.
It is possible there may be a small conflict of interest here.
See, but this is what the state gov't is for. I mean, leave it up to the states, who's top men are smarter than the top men at the federal level.
It's ok though, because the right awesome top men will one day come riding in on their unicorns as they give up their powers, and ensure individuals are free, and their rights are respected.
I think it would help the PPA's case if their system didn't look so much like a local government recruiting immigrants into a form of indentured servitude over medallions (the government's version of magic beans). They have a point, though: It sure isn't fair those cab drivers aren't Uber drivers. The Uber drivers have a much better deal, and so do their customers. As to the root of the disparity, that's pretty plain, right?
"Quickly, they're driving around our state monopoly! To the legislature!"
Yay!!! Um....we're gonna have to carpool in the HOV lane to get there 3 minutes earlier.
All local government agencies in Philly, including the PPA, are so routinely corrupt that it's virtually the official form of government. I'm not sure that government people there even understand that the way they operate could be considered corrupt. They certainly don't put much effort into hiding it.
Goodbye Reason: The only reason I wasted 30 seconds on that mandatory ad-video was to bid Reason adieu. I love the mag, but that's intolerable.
Vayas con Dios.
Can we still be friends?
Apps like Uber are too much in news and acting notorious. There are better apps available specially apps for pc available that are good.
Uber hasn't been able to maintain its reputation over time. People should give a try to this kind of apps for pc to get rid of such annoying spam.
I am interested in gaming apps like angry birds games and love to play them.
Uber has lost it's reputation in different countries so I would prefer apps available at Apps for PC store. It has so many apps.