Hawaii lawmakers are on track to add new insurance requirements to the ride颅 sharing services Uber and聽Lyft. The bill, , attempts to address what many see as an 鈥渋nsurance gap.”

However, Uber and Lyft drivers are already double insured.

These drivers are already required by Hawaii law to purchase their own personal car insurance policies.聽When the drivers are working, they are alson聽by Uber or Lyft.

An Uber vehicle in San Francisco.

Flickr.com/Adam Fagen

By contrast, Honolulu requires that taxi companies only carry insurance of $100,000 per person, $200,000聽for more than one person, and $50,000 for 聽颅颅 far less than the $1 million in commercial聽liability insurance that Uber and Lyft provide.

The Uber and Lyft insurance can scale up and down, depending on who is in the car. If the driver is in the聽car with the app off, the driver鈥檚 personal insurance is used. If the app is turned on, a middle ground聽contingency insurance and the personal insurance is used. And if the app has a customer, the kicks in.

This ability to scale the insurance up and down allows ride颅 sharing companies to save the best insurance for聽the customer.

However, SB 1280 in it鈥檚 current form guts the 鈥渕iddle ground鈥 contingency insurance. This means that聽only the most expensive form of insurance is used at all times 颅颅 even if no customer is in the vehicle 颅颅 and聽this turns a profit into a loss.

As far as safe driving goes, Uber and Lyft drivers score better than most taxi companies nationwide. A聽study by a driving analytics company called 聽in San Francisco found that ride颅s haring drivers聽were the least likely to speed, compared to taxi drivers, or regular drivers.

The incentive for this level of safety may come from the innovative rating system used by Uber and Lyft.

After a passenger is dropped off, he or she can give the driver between 1 to 5 stars. If any driver dips below聽, they may be suspended.

The proposed bills also add more regulations for background checks and car inspections. However, Uber聽and Lyft already go above and beyond the regulations. The ride颅 sharing companies do not accept any driver聽with a criminal record within the past seven years, which is with the National Sex Offender聽Registry, and other accredited third parties.

Taxi companies, by contrast, are only for their background checks.

Uber and Lyft may actually help make riders safe by decreasing alcohol related crashes, according to 补听蝉迟耻诲测 by Mothers Against Drunk Driving. In Honolulu, data suggests that more people are using Uber聽and Lyft to get home safely late at night, when are historically common.

Uber has already left Nevada, and 聽because of 鈥渂urdensome regulations鈥. However, have passed reasonable insurance requirements which effectively mirror Uber聽and Lyft鈥檚 high safety standards, and allow the companies to continue their service.

The million dollar insurance system that Uber and Lyft provide has worked safely in Honolulu all year.

The ride sharing companies have joined the taxi companies in offering creative and safe solutions to traffic聽congestion on Oahu. Adding unreasonable requirements may effectively end ride sharing in Hawaii, which聽may leave Hawaii鈥檚 citizens with options that are less safe.

 

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About the Author

  • Joe Kent

    Joe Kent is the Vice President of Research and Development for the Grassroot Institute of Hawaii, a non-partisan public-policy think tank which focuses on limited and accountable government in Hawaii. He grew up in Hilo, Hawaii, and spent seven years as a public school teacher in the Department of Education, teaching in both Minnesota, and in Lahaina, Maui.