While the Minneapolis City Council voted to boost pay for Uber and Lyft drivers in the city Thursday, the people who use the apps regularly are wondering if it’s about to get harder to get home.
The council met for the final vote on a measure meant to raise pay for rideshare drivers. It passed 9 to 4, a veto-proof majority. Mayor Jacob Frey vetoed a similar measure last year, but the council majority has tipped further to the left since then.
Uber and Lyft have amped up a campaign against the measure, taking steps to signal they intend to pull out of Minneapolis on May 1.
The departure of rideshare services would greatly affect Maggie Leese’s commute to work, she said Thursday after the council vote. In her experience, she said, it’s much more affordable than parking in an expensive parking garage. Plus Uber also allows pets, she said, as she patted her dog Luna.
“Our friends that we work with a live a couple blocks away, we share a car (rideshare),” Leese said. “I think it’d be more problematic than anything if there are no companies.”
Late Wednesday at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport, incoming travelers monitored the location of their drivers by phone while waiting in the airport Uber/Lyft pickup zone.
Mark Phelps of Eden Prairie said he frequently uses both Lyft and Uber to travel in and out of Minneapolis. He looks at both apps for the cheapest ride and if one is up he uses the other, he said.
“We’ve taken a cab from the airport, but otherwise calling a cab? I haven’t done it in years,” Phelps said, calling the prospect “a pain.”