A judge ruled that Uber doesn’t need to provide wheelchair-accessible vehicles in every market

Uber isn’t violating federal law by not providing wheelchair-accessible vehicles in all of its markets, a U.S. judge said this week.

U.S. District Chief Judge Richard Seeborg of the federal court in San Francisco ruled on Monday against two plaintiffs from New Orleans and one from Jackson, Mississippi, who use electric wheelchairs and argued that the ride-hailing company’s failure to provide accessible vehicles in their cities amounts to a violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act. 

In a response to the court’s decision, an Uber spokesperson said in a statement: “We welcome the outcome and are proud of our efforts to improve accessibility for all users, including through Uber WAV.”

The ruling marks a win for the ride-hailing giant, which has been criticized by disability advocates for allegedly not providing equal service for riders who need accommodation. It comes days after the company agreed to pay more than $2 million and waive some wait-time fees in order to settle a case with the Department of Justice that claimed the company violated the ADA by charging customers with disabilities wait time fees if they took longer than two minutes to reach their vehicle. 

“This agreement sends a strong message that Uber and other ridesharing companies will be held accountable if their services discriminate against people with disabilities,” Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division said in a statement following that settlement. 

The company currently offers wheelchair-accessible cars through its UberWAV program in a handful of cities, including Chicago, New York City, and Philadelphia. 

But in Monday’s ruling, Seeborg said that requiring Uber to implement wheelchair accessible vehicle service in every town would be “unreasonable” due to the burden of costs. Servicing such a commercial fleet in New Orleans, for example, would cost Uber $800,000 annually (about $400 per ride), the company claims.

Seeborg added that even if Uber invested in accessible vehicles, users in need would likely face significant wait times as well as unreliable UberWAV service hours. (Estimates suggested UberWAV would be available 16 hours per day on weekdays and 10 hours per day on weekends, meaning there would be large gaps of time in which no UberWAV service was available.)

“The anticipated cost here is too high for the limited service that would result, making the proposed modification unreasonable,” Seeborg wrote.

Scott Crawford, one of the lead plaintiffs on the case, says the court’s decision ends up placing the burden on people with disabilities and their lawyers.

“This is something that the Mississippi Legislature should remedy next session,” he said in an email to Fast Company. “I submit that if Uber is unwilling to ‘lift a finger’ to provide wheelchair-accessible service in its Capital City (the largest metro area of Mississippi), they don’t deserve to do business here at all.”

Crawford added that “nobody really thinks” that the legislature would take up the bill, but he’s still trying to push the cause.

https://www.fastcompany.com/90773057/a-judge-ruled-that-uber-doesnt-need-to-provide-wheelchair-accessible-vehicles-in-every-market?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Établi 3y | 27 juil. 2022, 15:21:14


Connectez-vous pour ajouter un commentaire

Autres messages de ce groupe

Going ‘AI-first’ appears to be backfiring on Klarna and Duolingo

Artificial intelligence might be the future of the workplace, but companies that are trying to get a head start on that future are running into all sorts of problems.

Klarna and Duloingo

12 mai 2025, 20:20:01 | Fast company - tech
Lyft CEO David Risher on competing with Uber and the future of rideshare

The rideshare market has reached a crossroads. Autonomous vehicles are on the rise, driver unrest is mounting, and customers are questioning everything from pricing to trust and safety. In the mid

12 mai 2025, 17:50:04 | Fast company - tech
Tech billionaires’ plan for a new California city may bypass voter approval

A group backed by tech billionaires spent years and $800 million secretly buying up over 60,

12 mai 2025, 13:20:04 | Fast company - tech
Snapchat’s Snap Map reaches 400 million users

Move aside, Google Maps: Snapchat’s Snap Map has hit a major milestone with 400 million monthly active users.

Launched in 2017, Snap Map began as a GPS-based feature that allowed users t

12 mai 2025, 13:20:03 | Fast company - tech
How Yahoo built AI-driven content discovery into its revamped news app

In April 2024, Yahoo acquired Artifact, a tool that uses AI to recommend news to readers. Yahoo folded Artifact’s—which was cofounded by Instagram cofounders Mike Krieger and Kevin Systrom—into it

12 mai 2025, 10:50:05 | Fast company - tech
How AI is changing your doctors appointments

It is hard to believe that in 2025, we are still dialing to schedule doctor appointments, get referrals, refill prescriptions, confirm office hours and addresses, and handle many other healthcare

12 mai 2025, 10:50:04 | Fast company - tech