Uber is back in court in
the UK today and tomorrow to try once again to overturn a two year old employment tribunal ruling that
judged a group of Uber drivers to be workers — meaning they’re entitled to
workers benefits such as holiday pay, paid rest breaks and the national minimum
wage.
Uber lost its first appeal
against the ruling last year but has said it will continue to appeal.
On Sunday the GMB Union
calculated that Uber drivers in the UK are £18,000 out of pocket as a result of
the company continuing to fight the rights judgement, rather than paying the
additional entitlements.
In a statement Sue Harris,
GMB legal director, said: “These figures lay bare the human cost of Uber
continuing to refuse to accept the ruling of the courts. While the company are
wasting money losing appeal after appeal, their drivers are up to £18,000 out
of pocket for the last two years alone.
“That’s thousands of
drivers struggling to pay their rent, or feed their families. It’s time Uber
admits defeat and pays up. The company needs to stop wasting money dragging its
lost cause through the courts. Instead, Uber should do the decent thing and
give drivers the rights to which those courts have already said they are
legally entitled.”
Uber has previously
suggested it would cost its UK business “tens of millions” of pounds if it
reclassified the circa 50,000 ‘self-employed’ drivers operating on its platform
as Limb (b) workers — an existing employment categorization that sits between
‘self-employed’ and ‘worker’.
The GMB Union notes that in
Uber London’s latest accounts, released last week, it warns shareholders that
it faces “numerous legal and regulatory risks”, both pertaining to existing
regulations and the development of new regulations, as well as as a result of
“claims and litigation” related to its classification of drivers as independent
contractors.
This year the UK government
has signalled a high level intent to bolster rights for more types of workers.
In February it announced a
package of labor market reforms intended to respond to changing working
patterns — saying it would expand workers rights for millions of workers and
touting tighter enforcement.
Though it continues to
consult on the issue, to shape the detail of its response, and it’s likely the
Uber litigation will feed into government thinking given the timing of the
case.
This month Uber drivers in
the UK staged a one-day strike over pay and conditions, piling more pressure on
the issue and calling for the company to immediately apply the tribunal
judgement and implement employment conditions that respect worker rights for
drivers.
Uber responded by pointing
to changes it has made since the original tribunal ruling — including expanding
a free insurance product it now offers to drivers and couriers across Europe.
It also claims to have
changed how it takes feedback from drivers, and flagged a number of tweaks to
its app it claims help drivers access data insights to boost their earnings.
We’ve reached out to Uber
for comment on the latest stage of its appeal.
The Independent Workers’
Union of Great Britain (IWGB), which is defending the tribunal judgement at the
hearings this week, backing former Uber drivers and co-claimants Yaseen Aslam
and James Farrar, who brought the original case, has organized a demonstration
to coincide with the hearing.
It says it expects hundreds
of “precarious workers”— i.e. people who labor in the so-called ‘gig economy’—
to march through London in solidarity with the drivers and demand an end to all
work that undermines workers rights.
The march is also being
backed by the left-leaning UK political organization Momentum, the
Communications Workers Union, War On Want, Bakers Food and Allied Workers Union
and United Voices of the World, among others.
A parallel event is being
held in Glasgow to coincide with the hearing.
Commenting in a statement,
IWGB United Private Hire Drivers branch chair and Uber case co-claimant Farrar
said: “It’s two years since we beat Uber at the Employment Tribunal, yet
minicab drivers all over the UK are still waiting for justice, while Uber
exhausts endless appeals. As the government ignores this mounting crisis, it’s
been left to workers to fix this broken system and bring rogue bosses to
account. If anything gives me hope, it is the rising tide of precarious workers
that are organising and demanding a fair deal.”
IWGB general secretary
Jason Moyer Lee added: “Precarious workers are getting hammered in this
country. The protest is the articulation of the legitimate grievance of those
who are being denied the basic rights and dignities at work that we should all
be able to take for granted.”
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