Blurred lines of ride-sharing

By Evelyn Harford

Photo illustration "Legal" vs. "illegal" ride-shares  Photo by: Joakim Formo/ Flickr Creative Commons Screen capture: Evelyn Harford/ The Gridlock
Photo illustration “Legal” vs. “illegal” ride-shares
(Photo © Joakim Formo at Flickr Creative Commons.
Modified by Evelyn Harford)

 

Ride-sharing is a cheap transport alternative in a legal grey-zone.

Uber has come under-siege recently by the City of Ottawa, which calls it an illegal ride-sharing company. However, the City of Ottawa continues to promote carpooling among its residents. The line drawn between illegal and legal ride-shares remains blurry.

Ride-sharing is a transaction between a driver and passenger to share a ride from point a to point b.

Ottawans, like Algonquin College student Adrian Sterling, flock to the web in search of cheap ride-sharing options. Sterling frequently uses Kijiji to find cheap rides when he travels to Toronto or Waterloo.

“If I was to go every week for a month, I would save about $100 dollars,” said Sterling. “I use ride-shares because they’re more efficient, I find I get there quicker, there’s not as many stops.”

Sterling said that he usually likes to hitch a ride with the same ride-share driver each time he travels. With different drivers offering a variety of destinations and prices, it is always easy to find a ride.

“There are other students. It’s a good experience,” he said. “At first I was skeptical about it. When you think of ride-shares you automatically think it’s you and the driver, and maybe one other person. It could be dangerous or something, but it’s always been a good experience, there could be two guys and three girls, we’ll play games on the way down and crack jokes.”

Proponents of ride-share say the trend is growing. There were 51 ride-share Kijiji ads posted today alone. Others use Craigslist and social media platforms like Facebook and Tumblr to both find and advertise ride-shares.

 

 

When it comes to enforcement, the Ottawa police say it’s a bylaw issue and it’s up to the city to figure out which rules the cops should enforce and how. In the midst of all this, the City of Ottawa says it is currently reviewing its taxi bylaw.

Montrealer Jonathan Haines uses Facebook, Craigslist, Kijiji and university boards to advertise his ride-sharing services. Haines has been offering rides to strangers and friends in his 2010 Hyundai Accent Hatchback for seven years, though he said he did not buy his hatchback with ride-sharing in mind.

“I recognized that I am providing a service that legally speaking would be regulated,” Haines said. “So I am operating outside the law, but I am not operating a business. I do one ride a month. The people that are operating the vans are operating unregulated businesses.”

If the City is going to crack down, Haines said it should focus on the vans operating daily between large cities.

“I think what they could curtail more, is the ride-share services that go everyday in vans. They are more of a problem. This is their whole income, and they would be avoiding taxes,” Haines said.

The cost of trips from Ottawa to Toronto and Montreal range from $15 to $40. But, as with everything on Craigslist or Kijiji there is room to bargain.

While the City of Ottawa promotes carpooling, it remains unclear about what constitutes a ‘legal carpool’ and what is defined as an illegal ride-share.

What is clear, according to insurance providers like All-State and RBC, drivers should have insurance covering the liability involved in a carpooling or ride-sharing arraignment. RBC Insurance recommends drivers check their insurance policy if they are participating in a ride-share or carpool.

In some cases when car owners indicate they take regular carpool passengers, their premiums go up to cover the cost of accidents that could leave passengers injured.

For now, ride-sharers not affiliated with larger companies like Uber enjoy relative freedom to offer their low-cost ‘service’.

Megabus uses a ride-share model to offer discounted rates to its passengers. Megabus, operating under bus company Coach Canada, offers trips between Toronto and Montreal at a much cheaper rate than Greyhound. However, Megabus does not run routes from Ottawa to Toronto or Ottawa to Montreal – routes that see the heaviest traffic from small-time rider-sharers advertising on Craigslist and Kijiji.

Coach Canada President John Emberson said the Ontario Highway Transportation Board rejected the application for Coach Canada to extend service between Ottawa and Toronto in the summer 2014.

“The province doesn’t want to over serve the routes,” said Emberson.

But, the number of ride shares advertised from Ottawa to Toronto and Montreal suggest there is a lot of demand for cheaper rides.

Emberson said that at Megabus, “We do our own version of ride-share. With the other carriers you’re just buying a ticket. In our case, for Megabus, you’re reserving a seat on a bus and we try to price that bus to get the seats full and by doing that we’re able to pass on the discounted savings to the passengers getting on the bus.”

Emberson said Coach Canada will continue trying to break into the Ottawa to Toronto, and Ottawa to Montreal routes. Until then, cheaper options will live and breathe on Craigslist, Kijiji and Facebook – supporting a largely underground mini-economy.

Watson to Baird: Forgo the Media on LRT and NCC

By Nicole Rutherford

Jim Watson waits for a response. (Photo Kelly Hobson)
Jim Watson waits for a response. (Photo © Kelly Hobson)

Despite sparking a recent flurry of online publicity, Mayor Jim Watson seems to be drawing the curtains a bit in his fight with the National Capital Commission over his light rail transit plan.

Earlier this week Watson caused a stir publicly, taking aim at the commission for not approving a key part of the light rail transit expansion and vowing to take his frustration to Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird, who is also responsible for the National Capital Commission.

The two have been firing contentious tweets and statements about their respective mandates, but today Watson’s special assistant, Brook Simpson, said that in the upcoming days the two politicians are trying to find a middle ground.

“The Mayor has made his opinion pretty clear,” Simpson said in regards to recent media spurs, “but now what they want is to talk face-to-face rather than through the media.”

 

John Baird’s office did not respond to a request for comment.

Watson hopes to meet with Baird about the commission’s recent decision to reject the design for a partially buried part of the light rail transit line along the Sir John A. MacDonald Parkway.

According to the commission’s website, this does not meet two of the board’s conditions:

“1) Unimpeded continuous access to the corridor lands and Ottawa River shorelines, and 2) minimal visual impact on the corridor landscape quality and the user experience of this corridor.”

As a counter-offer, the commission proposed a fully buried tunnel along the same route, which the city says would be far more expensive.

When the City of Ottawa responded with an offer to dig a 500-meter-long trench instead, commission spokesman Jean Wolff said this “wasn’t advisable because it wouldn’t protect the river front.”

The commission also offered to either reroute through the Rochester Field lands or to bury a deeper tunnel along its current route. None of this was well-received by the City of Ottawa as it was presented in what Watson described to the CBC as a “secret” and “disappointing” meeting where no city officials were invited.

Nonetheless, according to Wolff, the City of Ottawa is now conducting an Environmental Assessment of the Sir John A. MacDonald Parkway to see what can be done.

The city’s budget for the transit project, is estimated to be somewhere between $980 million to $1.2 billion dollars. It consists of an initial line set to be complete in 2018 that will connect Tunney’s Pasture and Blair Station. There will then be an additional extension connecting the Baseline Station to Algonquin College.

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