City of Toronto to stop issuing new ride-hailing driver's licences until training in place - Action News
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Toronto

City of Toronto to stop issuing new ride-hailing driver's licences until training in place

Toronto city council will ask its staff to pause immediately the issuing of new ride-hailing drivers'licences until a mandatory driver training program is in place.

Mayor says issue is about safety and decision comes as city seeks vendors to provide training

A car drives past a person holding out a phone displaying the Uber app on a busy street in downtown Toronto.
A view of the Uber app on an iPhone in Toronto, Ontario on Oct. 20, 2021. (Carlos Osorio/CBC)

Toronto city council will ask its staff to pause immediately the issuing of new ride-hailing drivers'licences until a mandatory driver training program is in place to makethe servicesafer.

Council voted20to 3 Wednesday in favour of a motion to request thatCarleton Grant,executive director of municipal, licensing and standards, stop the issuing of new vehicle-for-hire and private transportation company drivers'licencestemporarily.

The issuing will resume once adriver training accreditation program is establishedand applicants have completed a driver training course.

Mayor John Tory, who supported the motion put forwardby Coun. Kristyn Wong-Tam, saidit was a question of safety. He noted that council first approved the idea of such a program more than two years ago. Councillors made that movein response to a fatal accident involving an Uberdriverin 2018. However, the pandemic delayed its implementation.

"I'm not going to make excuses for anybody here today, including our officials," Tory said.

"I said yesterday ...they do an excellent job and they have done an excellent job during the pandemic. But two and a half years to come forward with a training program that's still not in front of us is not acceptable. It's just not acceptable."

Tory said he thinks the motion will send a clear message that a driver training program is important.

Wong-Tam said Toronto residents should have peace of mind when they get into Uber or Lyft vehicles. Thousands of ride-hailing drivers on Toronto streets, however, have not been trained, she said.

"How are we keeping the public safe?" she asked.

Wong-Tam said the motion asks municipal, licensing and standardsstaff members to do their jobs, which is to "enhance the quality of life in the city of Toronto by ensuring publicsafety, community integrity, consumer protection and responsible business practices." She said city council has to be held responsible.

Coun. Michael Ford, for his part, said he supported the motion because it's the right approach and it's about putting a policyin place that council has wanted for some time.

"I think this is something that council has to senda message and say:'Look, we want this done.It should be done,'" Ford said.

The motion comes after Grant told councilthat the city issued a request for proposals from vendors for a ride-share driver training program on Tuesday. That procurement process will close on Dec.10.

In a statement on Wednesday, Uber said: 'It is deeply unfair to punish the thousands of drivers who want to earn a living and the hundreds of thousands of Torontonians who require a reliable rideshare service to help them get from point A to point B because of the City's slow action.' (Ryan Remiorz/The Canadian Press)

Uber 'disappointed' by decision

In a statement on Wednesday, a spokesperson for Ubersaid the decision punishes drivers.

"Uber fully supports the Driver Training Accreditation program. And, over the past year and a half, we've actively urged the City to accelerate its implementation," the spokesperson said.

"So while we are heartened to see the program finally start to take shape, we are disappointed by the Council's decision to pause licensing in the interim," the spokesperson continued.

"It is deeply unfair to punish the thousands of drivers who want to earn a living and the hundreds of thousands of Torontonians who require a reliable rideshare service to help them get from point A to point B because of the City's slow action."

For its part, Lyft said in a statement: "Drivers go through rigorous safety screenings prior to being approved to drive on the Lyft platform, and we are supportive of Toronto's efforts to improve public safety.

"However, it's important that we do so in a way that doesn't jeopardize earning opportunities for people at a time when many are still recovering from the economic devastation of COVID-19. We look forward to collaborating with the city in order to achieve our shared goals."

In a statement on Wednesday, Lyft said: 'Drivers go through rigorous safety screenings prior to being approved to drive on the Lyft platform, and we are supportive of Toronto's efforts to improve public safety. However, it's important that we do so in a way that doesn't jeopardize earning opportunities for people at a time when many are still recovering from the economic devastation of COVID-19.' (Ben Nelms/CBC)

In July 2019, council adopted new mandatory training requirements for vehicle-for-hire drivers, such as taxicabs and limousines, and private transportation company drivers, such as Uber and Lyft, following the death ofNicholas Cameron onMarch 21, 2018. The training requirements, however, were never implemented because of pandemic demands.

Cameron, 28, hired an Uber driver to takehim to the airport. The driver pulled onto the left shoulder of theGardinerExpressway to pick up his cell phone from the floor of the car before merging back into traffic, and the car was hit from behind by a vehicledriving at full speed breaking Cameron's neck.

Camerondiedthe followingday.Three other occupants of the two vehicles were taken to the hospital withnon-life-threatening injuries.

The Uber driver,Abdihared Bishar-Mussa from Ottawa, was sentenced to two years' probation, a one year driving suspension, and 50 hours of community service. He was also fined $1,000 and ordered to undergo driver retraining.

Under a bylaw passed by council, the executive director of municipal licensing and standards was required to establish a driver training program, and from June 1, 2020, was required to have all drivers complete thetraining course. But the pandemic scuttled those plans.

"As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic and the re-direction of Municipal Licensing and Standards resources to pandemic-related initiatives, the implementation of the driver training program has been delayed," a council documentreads.