Province not budging on licence requirements for ridesharing
Posted March 27, 2019 8:10 pm.
This article is more than 5 years old.
VICTORIA (NEWS 1130) — If you’re interested in driving for Uber or Lyft it looks like the province isn’t going to change its tune.
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Transportation Minister Claire Trevena is not budging on calls for a Class 4 licence — the licence required to drive buses with up to 25 passengers, taxis and limos, and ambulances — despite the all-party committee calling for a standard Class 5 licence, and continued criticism from the opposition.
Liberal leader Andrew Wilkinson has nothing good to say about the province’s decision, calling it a “manipulated, contrived government operation, half-baked and won’t work.”
But Trevena is holding firm and not entertaining other options because she says requiring that Class 4 licence gives people extra security.
“Class 4 is generally for transporting people — its for wine tours, for taxis and will be for app-based ride hailing,” she says. “(We) want to make sure that people who get into a car — whether it’s a cab or a ride hail — and who are paying for service are safe.”
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Making money off driving is another also key in her decision, although couriers only require a Class 5 licence.
She says this is what many other jurisdictions are doing, but Alberta is the only region requiring a Class 4 license.
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Other provinces like Saskatchewan are offering a middle ground –the option of using a regular Class 5 licence if you meet additional requirements, such as not having any DUIs in the past 10 years.