Uber reaches deal to avoid election confrontation with lawyers
Uber was in the hot seat as two measures that target the ride-hailing companys financial liabilities officially qualified for the November ballot for less than 24 hours. On Thursday afternoon, the ride-hailing company and a group of trial attorneys issued a joint statement that they had reached an agreement and plan to throw out their battling ballot measures.
Uber and a group of personal injury attorneys spent tens of millions campaigning to qualify the two measures to be on the ballot this November. The California Secretary of States office announced Wednesday evening that both had qualified. One that was advertised as a pro-consumer proposal and backed by Uber sought to reduce the amount of money personal injury lawyers could get in car crash settlements, and the other proposed to increase Uber and other ride-hailing companies legal liability for sexual misconduct claims. The latter was backed by an attorney advocacy group.
But, the very next day, the groups agreed to kill the proposals.
Both sides agree: Californians deserve a system thats safe, fair, and accountable. This agreement protects patients from unnecessary treatment or getting overcharged, ensures access to medical care and legal representation, and strengthens safety measures, said a joint statement from Uber and the Consumer Attorneys of California, the Los Angeles Times reported Thursday. Representatives for both sides told the LA Times that they have a week for the agreement, which the LA Times said included Uber agreeing to bolster its safety protocols and the lawyers agreeing to limit medical claims, to be codified into a bill. If that doesnt happen, both groups will proceed with their ballot measures, the Times reported.
https://www.sfgate.com/politics/article/uber-election-ballot-measure-22311299.php