Technology continues to advance and change our world, human
nature does not change. Technological advancement does not mean moral
advancement. While we can summon a wealth of information in less than a second,
the human race isn’t applying this knowledge in a way that makes our world any
more just and fair.
And so it is with our taxicabs. While technology enables us to hail cabs, it has not
improved the ethical standards of drivers or riders. I have seen this
illustrated across our city in several ways, but most vividly this past week.
It was after 6 p.m. and since I was out of work late I
wanted to waste no time in getting home. I was in downtown Manhattan and the
traffic looked painfully slow. I positioned myself near a street corner so a
car could make a quick exit off of a bumper-to-bumper Broadway. I requested a
ride from Lyft.
I got a call from the first Lyft driver.
“Hi this is your driver from Lyft, can I confirm where you
are?”
“Yes. I am at Broadway and Worth Street. I’m a bit before
Worth Street so you can make a left and get out of this terrible traffic.”
“And can I confirm where you are going?”
“Flushing, Queens,” I said truthfully.
A few seconds after our call ended. I saw that the driver
had canceled my ride and the mobile app was searching for a new driver for me.
I also realized how I had made a terrible mistake. One of
the features that is supposed to make ride hailing services better than hailing
cabs on the street is that the application does not tell the driver where you
are going until they confirm on their device that you are in their vehicle.
This stops them from cherry picking rides the way yellow cab drivers do, asking
passengers where they are going before they get in the cab, so they can avoid
taking fares to destinations they don’t like.
Ride hailing drivers subvert this system in two ways: they
will pull over and confirm on their device that you are in the cab when you are
not, and then canceling the ride before you get to them. And, like they did
with me, they call you and ask where you are going and then cancel the ride if
they don’t like what you tell them.
The second Lyft driver called a few minutes later, doing the
same thing. I didn’t tell them, but it didn’t help anyway.
“Can you confirm where you are going?”
“I’m on Broadway and Worth. I’ll see you soon. Are you
nearby?”
“Yes. I am at Broadway and White Street. I will be there
soon. … Can you confirm where you are going?”
“That’s a great question. I’ll confirm when I see you. And
I’ll see you soon,” I said with the friendliest confidence I could muster.
My phone soon indicated that this driver had canceled as
well, and now I had to start the request for a driver all over again. And guess
what? The price for a ride was now about $20 more than when I was first looking
for a ride. This made me livid but I was too tired to get worked up about it,
and besides, I would have been mistaken for a crazy person, shouting at my
smartphone in the middle of Broadway as downtown traffic slowly crawled by.
The third driver arrived and completed the trip. With all
the shady driver shenanigans, I probably saved no time in getting home and
would have been better off taking a subway or express bus.
A friend who is a yellow cab driver broke down the one issue
he may have with taking fares to the outer boroughs: if it’s towards the end of
his shift, he faces late fees if he brings his cab back to the garage late.
That’s the only time he picks and chooses his fares, and he recommends
reporting those drivers that won’t take customers where they want to go. My
friend is exceptionally good at what he does, and even lets passengers know
when they can get somewhere faster using public transit. I had one Lyft driver
tell me that in Maryland recently, and I much appreciated it.
In a few short years, the drivers at ride-share services
like Uber and Lyft have perfected many of the repugnant practices that sent riders away from yellow cabs to begin with.
Ride-hailing service drivers are known to cancel rides in time to take
advantage of surge pricing times. No-show cab drivers can still saddle would-be
riders with $5 cancelation charges which are difficult (though not impossible)
to fight through the companies’ Web sites. And yellow cab drivers are left in
the lurch, many of them deeply in debt with loans for medallions that they may
never be able to pay back, a situation regulators ignored.
At the same time, ride sharing services are in greater
demand, since our public transit system is so rotten to the core the subways
lines can be delayed even by an overflowing toilet.
As with yellow cabs, remain vigilant when you are taking one
of the raid hailing services. What looks like a minor inconvenience could be
another scam.
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