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Uber and Lyft Drivers Celebrate Passage of Fair Pay in Seattle

Peter-&-Daughter

Fair Pay Standard Completes Mayor Durkan’s Fare Share Plan, Cementing Seattle’s Position as National Leader on Groundbreaking Labor Protections for Gig Workers

Press Contact: Joshua Welter Phone: (206) 383-1857  Email: joshua.welter@teamsters117.org

(SEATTLE) – Today, Uber and Lyft drivers with the Drivers Union celebrated the passage of a Fair Pay standard by a unanimous 9-0 vote by the Seattle City Council, further cementing Seattle’s position as a national leader on groundbreaking labor protections for gig workers. 

The pay standard establishes the highest legislated earnings floor drivers have achieved in the nation, built to ensure that pay never falls below Seattle’s minimum wage after expenses. 

The labor victory comes on the heels of Seattle passing first-in-the-nationsick payandhazard pay for gig workers, and completes Mayor Durkan’s Fare Share Plan, which includes the nation’sfirst protections against unwarranted deactivation, and funding for driver support services through a    Driver Resolution Center

“Seattle is once again leading the nation by passing fair pay for Uber and Lyft drivers,” said Peter Kuel, an Uber and Lyft driver since 2013 and President of Drivers Union. “Historic victories like this should serve as an inspiration for all gig workers around the country of what is possible through organizing together as a Union to demand fair treatment.”

Drivers Union led the multi-year campaign to win fair pay for Uber and Lyft drivers – surrounding City Hall with a driver caravan, organizing multiple drivers actions, and exposing Uber and Lyft taking more from riders, while paying drivers less.

“Uber and Lyft drivers in Seattle are at the forefront of a resurgence of the labor movement,” said John Scearcy, Secretary-Treasurer of Teamsters Local 117. “It is inspiring to stand alongside Black and brown immigrant workers – those who have been excluded from the protections of 20th Century labor laws – rising up to say ‘Enough is enough – if the old laws don’t protect us and lift up the dignity of our work, we will make new ones.’”

The Fair Pay standard is built off of over a year of stakeholder outreach, surveys and townhalls which engaged thousands of drivers, and recommendations from a city-commissioned independent study that found that Uber/Lyft drivers in Seattle often earn less than minimum wage after expenses.

Last week, a committee chaired by Councilmember Teresa Mosqueda unanimously voted to strengthen the policy with improved transparency for riders and drivers, and additional living wage protections accounting for time spent cleaning and sanitizing vehicles between trips.

Implementation of the Fair Pay standard and other groundbreaking protections in the Fare Share Plan will occur in 2021.

The Fare Share Plan has been backed by a coalition of over 65 housing, transit, labor, environmental, health, and social justice groups that came together to make sure Seattle’s growth works for everyone.

Drivers Union, affiliated with Teamsters Local Union 117, is an association of thousands of Uber and Lyft drivers in Seattle standing up for fairness in the for-hire transportation industry.