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Uber blasts Andy Gardiner as being impediment in getting ride-sharing bill passed

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Will 2016 finally be the year the Florida Legislature implements rules of the road for ride-sharing companies Uber and Lyft?

In late January, theĀ Florida House of RepresentativesĀ overwhelmingly passed a bill (HB 509) addressing Transportation Network Companies (TNC), but its fate in the state Senate is unknown, and officials with Uber on Tuesday blamed President Andy Gardiner’s intransigence for that holdup.

ā€œWeĀ are calling on Senator Gardiner to set his personal self-interest aside, set special interest politics aside, and follow through on his word,ā€ saidĀ Colin Tooze, Director, Public Affairs with Uber, in a conference call.

The ā€œpersonal self-interestā€ is a reference to Gardiner’s relationship with Roger Chapin, the vice president with Mears Transportation in Orlando and board member withĀ Florida Taxicab Association. That group has been pushing the Legislature to enact tough regulations on Uber and Lyft.

The key difference between the Senate and House bills has to do with the Senate’s insistence requiring thatĀ the ride-sharing driver to have insurance coverage even when he or she is not logged into the Uber or Lyft app.

The House legislation, sponsored by Fort Walton Beach Republican Matt Gaetz, includesĀ insurance requirements of $50,000 in coverage for death and bodily injury per person, $100,000 in coverage for death and bodily injury per incident and $25,000 in coverage for property damage while logged on to the network.Ā It would also set requirements for driver background checks and would block local governments from establishing rules for rideshare programs. That provision has drawn opposition from the Florida League of Cities and the Florida Association of Counties.

A measure in the Senate sponsored by Altamonte Springs Republican Dave Simmons and supported by Gardiner has yet to come to the Senate floor for a vote. Its insurance requirements for Uber and Lyft are more expensive than the House version.

It would require ride-sharing companiesĀ to have $125,000 in coverage for death and bodily injury per person, $250,000 in coverage for death and bodily injury per incident and $50,000 in coverage for property damage when logged on to the network or engaged in a prearranged ride. And when the driver was not logged into the system,Ā drivers would have to maintain $25,000 in coverage for death and bodily injury per person, $50,000 in coverage for death and bodily injury per incident and $10,000 in coverage for property damage, all levels that are higher than the state’s personal injury protection insurance requirements.

Uber’s Tooze called those ā€œunprecedented concessionsā€ and said he thought he thought that the company had a deal with the Legislature, but said that, ā€œUnfortunately, Mears and their powerful benefactor in the Senate changed their minds and have walked away from a deal that would have ensured access to safe transportation options and flexible work for all Floridians. It’s apparent now that they were never serious about it in the first place,ā€ adding that ā€œsomething’s not on the level.ā€

ā€œTheĀ pound of flesh they demanded was more expensive insurance policies than anywhere else in the country, making it more expensive for Uber to operate in Florida,ā€ Tooze added, disdain dripping from his voice.

ChapinĀ said he didn’t know what Uber was talking about. He said he’s met with officials from the company a few times this year, but said, “I don’t think we have ever come away from the table with a deal, so I’m not sure where that’s coming from.”

He said that he’s never gone over ride-sharing legislation with Gardiner, but has with Senate bill sponsor Dave Simmons. “I think they’re justĀ rolling into an example of where they haven’t gotten their way like they have in other places, and it’s kind of pissed them off,” he said of the Uber official spokesman comments.

Katie Betta, a spokesperson for Senator Gardiner, said the issue is that there is not a true companion bill in the Senate to Gaetz’ bill in the House.

ā€œDuring the 2016 Legislative Session, no Senator filed a companion to the House bill requiring state pre-emption,ā€ she wrote to FloridaPolitics.com in an email. ā€œPulling a House bill with no Senate sponsor that has never been heard in a single Senate Committee from its committees of reference and taking it up on the Senate floor requires the unanimous consent of the Senate. Any Senator can make such a motion.ā€

Before the conference call took place, the Florida Taxicab Association issued a statement referencing how Uber’sĀ website statesĀ that drivers need not bother with alerting their personal insurance carriers when signing up to drive for the company, stating that,Ā ā€œduring the time that a ride-sharing partner is available but between trips, most personal auto insurance will provide coverage.ā€

The post went on to quoteĀ Josh Mohrer, an Uber general manager, whoĀ recently acknowledgedĀ that drivers’ personal auto insurers do deny claims for accidents that occur during the gap between the driver logging onto the app and when he or she accepts a ride.

The Taxicab Association said such a statement called into question whether insurance covering the cost of an accident ā€œmost of the timeā€ is a sound policy.

An Uber official emailed a response to FloridaPolitics.com upon seeing those comments:”Uber has insurance in place at all times when a driver is logged into the app, both in the period before a driver accepts a trip and during the trip. While on a trip, there is $1 million in coverage in place, more than 4 times what taxi is required to have under Florida law.”

Mitch Perry has been a reporter with Extensive Enterprises since November of 2014. Previously, he served as five years as the political editor of the alternative newsweekly Creative Loafing. He also was the assistant news director with WMNF 88.5 FM in Tampa from 2000-2009, and currently hosts MidPoint, a weekly talk show, on WMNF on Thursday afternoons. He began his reporting career at KPFA radio in Berkeley. He's a San Francisco native who has now lived in Tampa for 15 years and can be reached at [email protected].

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