Uber vows to increase focus on customer safety

SHARE Uber vows to increase focus on customer safety

LOS ANGELES — Uber promises to focus on rider safety amid increasing concerns that its drivers are not adequately screened for past criminal convictions.

In a blog post Wednesday, Uber’s head of global safety defended the company’s safety record but also wrote that “as we look to 2015, we will build new safety programs and intensify others.”

RELATED: Chicago Police investigate Uber driver accused of sex assault

The taxi alternative, valued at $40 billion, lets passengers summon cars through an app in more than 250 cities around the world. It faces multiples legal and regulatory challenges as it expands in the United States and abroad.

Last week, prosecutors in California, where Uber is based, filed a lawsuit alleging that the company exaggerates how comprehensive its driver background checks are. They do not, for example, require that drivers be fingerprinted — unlike drivers of regulated taxis in San Francisco and Los Angeles.

The Wednesday blog post did not mention the California lawsuit, though it did reference a case in India in which a driver was accused of raping a passenger.

The blog post came the same day that an Uber driver in Massachusetts was arraigned on charges including rape and kidnapping after being accused of sexually assaulting a woman who had summoned the ride-sharing service.

In the post, the recently hired head of global safety at Uber offered few details of upcoming changes. The initiatives will include the creation of teams that can rapidly respond to safety-related reports and new ways to screen would-be drivers.

“We are finding solutions in many places that range from polygraph exams that fill gaps in available data to adding our own processes on top of existing screening for commercial licenses,” company security chief Philip Cardenas wrote. “We are exploring new ways to screen drivers globally, using scientific analysis and technology to find solutions.”

A spokesman for San Francisco County District Attorney George Gascon said because of its lawsuit, the office can’t comment on the specific proposals. “Obviously we encourage any changes that actually make rides safer,” spokesman Alex Bastian said.

Uber’s opponents in the taxicab industry, who worry that the increasingly popular app is siphoning away their business, were not impressed.

Calling Uber’s proposals “a decoy to quell the intense criticism the company is generating worldwide,” a spokesman for the Taxicab, Limousine and Paratransit Association challenged the company to “follow the rule of law tomorrow and truly begin moving toward safe operations.”

The Latest
Gutierrez has not started the past two games, even though the offense has struggled.
Rawlinson hopes to make an announcement regarding the team’s plans for an individual practice facility before the 2024 season begins.
Once again there are dozens of players with local ties moving on from their previous college stop in search of a better or different opportunity.
State lawmakers can pass legislation that would restore the safeguards the U.S. Supreme Court removed last year on wetlands, which play a key role in helping to mitigate the impact of climate change and are critical habitats for birds, insects, mammals and amphibians.
Not all filmmakers participating in the 15-day event are of Palestinian descent, but their art reclaims and champions narratives that have been defiled by those who have a Pavlovian tendency to think terrorists — not innocent civilians — when they visualize Palestinian men, women and children.