Visitors who pour by the thousands into Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport have long been able to take for granted that fleets of rideshare drivers will be ready to pick them up at the flick of a smartphone and ferry them around the Twin Cities.
In a month’s time, that option could disappear. It’s got local tourism industry leaders more than a little nervous.
“It’s just crazy to think about,” said Angie Whitcomb, CEO of Hospitality Minnesota, a nonprofit group that represents restaurants, lodging and resorts throughout the state.
Minneapolis hospitality and tourism agencies are anxiously contemplating a future without rideshare services, even as they remain hopeful for a resolution to the dispute between the Minneapolis City Council and two rideshare giants over driver pay that has Uber and Lyft vowing a May 1 departure from Minneapolis.
That would leave a big hole in the local transportation system and inflict even more harm on an already struggling hospitality industry, especially hotels, said Adam Duininck, president and CEO of the Downtown Council and Downtown Improvement District.
“We need to build up businesses and not lose more businesses,” he said. “We need to look for more ways to move people around downtown, not less.”
In 2023, there were nearly 1.9 million stays at Minneapolis hotels, an increase of 15% over the year prior, according to Meet Minneapolis. This year is off to a busy start for travel, with 49,190 people passing through Transportation Security Administration checkpoints on March 21 — the second-busiest day at MSP since the start of the pandemic. The busiest day in that period was during MEA week last fall.
The hospitality industry itself is supported by many workers who rely on rideshare access to get to and from work after late shifts. “Our businesses operate on extended hours and at 2 in the morning you can’t be guaranteed there’s going to be public transportation at the front door of your place of business to get you safely home,“ Whitcomb said.