Uber agrees to pay drivers $20 million to settle independent contractor lawsuit
Source: TechCrunch
Uber agrees to pay drivers $20 million to settle independent contractor lawsuit
Megan Rose Dickey / 11 hours ago
At a time when the gig economy is under heavy scrutiny around its practices of classifying workers as 1099 independent contractors, IPO-bound Uber has officially settled a six-year-long case regarding this exact topic.
Today, Uber agreed to pay $20 million to settle the class-action lawsuit, brought forth by Douglas OConnor and Thomas Colopy way back in 2013. This comes after a judge rejected Ubers offer to settle for $100 million back in 2016.
The suit claimed Uber classified its drivers as contractors to avoid paying them a minimum wage and providing benefits. Since its original filing, the suit was granted class-action status to represent hundreds of thousands of drivers in California and Massachusetts. That victory for drivers was short-lived when an appeals court ruled Ubers arbitration agreements were valid and enforceable. That decision reduced the number of drivers in the class to about 13,600.
Those eligible for a payout from the settlement include those who drove for Uber between August 16, 2009, and February 28, 2019, in California or Massachusetts. They must also not be bound by Ubers arbitration clause.
In addition to the $20 million settlement, Uber has agreed to implement a comprehensive written deactivation policy, a formal appeals process for certain deactivation decisions and quality courses for drivers.
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Read more:
https://techcrunch.com/2019/03/12/uber-agrees-to-pay-drivers-20-million-to-settle-independent-contractor-lawsuit/