Uber's
popular ride-sharing network has repeatedly failed to promptly suspend and
investigate its California drivers when passengers report them driving drunk,
state regulators charged in an enforcement action, recommending $1.13 million
in fines.
The consumer
protection arm of the California Public Utility Commission found Uber
Technologies Inc has violated "zero-tolerance" rules governing
drunken-driving complaints on 151 occasions over the course of a year, out of
154 complaints reviewed.
In only 21
of those cases did the company conduct any follow-up driver investigation, the
commission inquiry found.
The
recommended fine for alleged violations is believed to mark the first such
citation issued against the San Francisco-based ride-hailing network or its
competitors since the rules were adopted in 2013.
The
enforcement action follows a recent consumer backlash against the company and
its senior management over a series of revelations about its corporate culture
and business tactics, including complaints of sexual harassment.
The
drunken-driving findings, which stem from a review of passenger complaints lodged
between August 2014 and August 2015, were contained in a nine-page
investigative order issued by the commission's Consumer Protection and
Enforcement Division on Tuesday.
Those
charges and the proposed penalty are now subject to examination by an administrative
law judge who will conduct further proceedings before recommending to the
five-member commission itself what action, if any, should be taken against the
company.
Uber
spokeswoman Eva Behrend, noting that the report relates to complaints dating
back two or three years, said, "We've significantly improved our processes
since then."
"We
have zero tolerance for any impaired driving," she said, citing Uber's
"community guidelines," which state that any driver found to be under
the influence of drugs or alcohol while on the job will be "permanently
deactivated" from the network.
"Uber
may also deactivate the account of any driver who receives several unconfirmed
complaints of drug or alcohol use," it says.
According to
the commission's own findings, the company received 2,047 zero-tolerance
complaints statewide against its UberX and UberPool drivers during the year in
question, and the company dismissed drivers in 574 of those cases.
The company,
which operates in 74 countries, says it currently has 147,000 drivers on the
Uber platform in California, accounting for nearly one-fourth of its U.S.
total.
(Business
Insider)
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