The Hawaii Department of Transportation is cracking down on two ride services that entered the Oahu market in June, ordering them to stop picking up and dropping off passengers at Honolulu International Airport.
Last month, Roy Sakata, manager of DOT鈥檚 Oahu airport division, sent letters to San Francisco-based companies UberX and Lyft informing them that their drivers were not allowed to provide rides to and from the airport without obtaining permits and paying applicable fees.
Both companies 鈥 popular for their smart phone apps that hail cars 鈥 employ freelance drivers in what they characterize as informal 鈥渞ide sharing鈥 services.
While UberX has discontinued its airport service, it鈥檚 not clear if Lyft is complying.聽
Lyft spokeswoman Katie Dally would only say that the company was working with state officials to address their concerns.聽
鈥淲e look forward to continuing productive and collaborative conversations with airports in Hawaii and across the country to come to a conclusion that preserves a way forward for this community-powered transportation movement,鈥 she said by email.
UberX drivers have told Civil Beat that they have been instructed not to do any more airport runs. And a spokeswoman for the company said that only Uber鈥檚 licensed taxi and black car services, are operating at the airport.
鈥淐urrently, travelers can request any driver partners that are licensed to pick up passengers from the airport,鈥 Eva Behrend, a spokeswoman for Uber, said by email. 鈥淭his includes driver partners who are on both UberTaxi and UberBlack platforms.鈥
DOT spokesman Derek Inoshita said that two drivers had initially been issued tickets at the airport, however the citations were subsequently dropped while transportation officials work to resolve the dispute with Uber and Lyft.聽
Local taxi companies, including EcoCab and Charley鈥檚 Taxi, have argued that UberX and Lyft are essentially bandit cabs, dodging costly regulations that cab drivers have to comply with and leading to unfair market competition. They鈥檝e urged city officials, which license taxis, to step in, but to little avail so far. However, the City Council鈥檚 Transportation Committee has scheduled a discussion on the issue at its next meeting聽later this month.
The nascent fight over UberX and Lyft on Oahu resembles debates that have roiled other major cities throughout the United States and in Europe, with traditional taxi companies at times taking to the streets in protest.
In recent months,聽some聽cities have ordered the interlopers to stop operating or forged some sort of regulatory compromise.
Both Lyft and UberX argue that their 鈥渞ide-sharing鈥 services, which provide below market fares, foster market competition and provide consumers with options. Cars are easily hailed with a phone app and passengers can track their drivers on a GPS map. Also, no fares are exchanged because the companies automatically deduct the cost of the ride from passengers’ credit cards on file.
Dally said that Lyft, which takes 鈥渄onations鈥 rather than fares, employs a very different model from regular taxis.聽
鈥淔or example, Lyft does not own vehicles or employ drivers 鈥 Lyft drivers are professional drivers and use their own cars, that they use primarily for personal use, to drive when they have the time,鈥 she said by email. 鈥淎s a result, trying to fit Lyft into the existing model is like trying to fit a square peg in a round hole.鈥
Executives at taxi companies聽disagree and argue that companies like Lyft and UberX provide services that are no different than a regular taxi service.
You can read DOT’s letter to Lyft below. An identical letter was sent to Uber:
GET IN-DEPTH REPORTING ON HAWAII鈥橲 BIGGEST ISSUES
Support Independent, Unbiased News
Civil Beat is a nonprofit, reader-supported newsroom based in 贬补飞补颈驶颈. When you give, your donation is combined with gifts from thousands of your fellow readers, and together you help power the strongest team of investigative journalists in the state.