San Jose

Hundreds of Taxi Drivers Protest at San Jose Airport, City Hall for Equal Regulations on Ride-Booking Services

Hundreds of taxi drivers are not providing rides Tuesday at Norman Y. Mineta San Jose International Airport and have taken their strike citywide as part of a protest calling for equal regulations for ride-booking service drivers.

After a walkout Monday, about 300 drivers have continued to halt service at the airport, where they drove today between terminals A and B but did not pick up or drop off passengers, San Jose Airport Taxi Driver Association president Shakur Buni said.

Airport officials tweeted that limousines and door-to-door shuttle services are available for passengers who need a ride Tuesday.

Buni said the group plans to also drive and protest outside San Jose City Hall before they attend Tuesday's City Council meeting, which includes a discussion on revising policies for online ride-booking companies such as Uber and Lyft operating at the airport.

The drivers are calling for all ride-booking service drivers to be fingerprinted and undergo background checks and to be charged the same fees as taxi drivers, said Buni who has driven a taxi for Yellow Checker Cab for 20 years.

"All the taxi drivers must do a criminal background and fingerprinting and that’s what’s missing in this City Council recommendation," Buni said.

In June, the council approved a pilot program that required ride-booking service drivers to participate in criminal background checks, send in fingerprints, and attain a business license and permits to conduct
business at the airport.

However, no ride-booking service company applied for the program, which prompted the city to explore changes, airport spokeswoman Rosemary Barnes said.

The council will consider a model used in San Diego that allows the companies to choose one of three methods for a monthly audit on 1 percent of their drivers, Barnes said.

About 200 taxi cab drivers staged a strike because they are upset that the city council is likely to back off cracking down on ride-sharing companies. Bob Redell reports.

The ride-booking drivers will also need to comply with background checks from the California Public Utilities Commission, which does not require fingerprinting, according to Barnes.

If the program is approved, the airport will look into operating the same standard for taxi drivers, Barnes said.

However, Diana Bailey, operations manager at San Jose's second-largest taxi company Green Cab, stressed that not requiring background checks and fingerprints of ride-booking service drivers poses a public safety concern.

Airport officials have said they will lose money if they don't have ride-booking services available for passengers, but Bailey argued that allowing the companies and charging them less per trip compared to taxis would result in lost earnings for the airport.

All ride-booking service drivers should be subject to the audits in addition to alcohol and drug testing, Bailey said. 

For his part, Mayor Sam Liccardo said San Diego International Airport is conducting random audits and believes it makes sense for San Jose to follow suit.

"I think this is the best move to increase safety while allow the public to have increasing choice," he said.

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