Reminds me of a great article on taxis in general I read last year:<p><a href="http://daily.sightline.org/2011/08/05/freeing-taxis/" rel="nofollow">http://daily.sightline.org/2011/08/05/freeing-taxis/</a><p>"What if the Northwest’s cities legally capped the number of pizza delivery cars? What if, despite growing urban population and disposable incomes, our Pizza Delivery Oversight Boards had scarcely issued new delivery licenses since 1975?"<p>I started talking about this with one of my Canadian friends and his response was basically that limiting the number of cabs was clearly a good thing and that it helped taxi drivers make a living. The argument that it was a bad thing for anyone trying to get into the taxi business didn't really sway him.<p>My general impression is that while Americans are more willing to stand aside when a market is clearly failing, Canadians are more willing to intervene when a market is clearly working.
While I'm for a disruptive force to the cab business, automobiles also should have some licensing when transporting other people as a service with the transaction of money. So I'm for Uber not being allowed in BC unless they license their drivers. The question is, can the existing industry improve without losing everything to entirely unregulated drivers who may have 5 previous hit and run convictions that no one knows about? There's going to be a large market for lawsuits involving companies like Uber and AirBNB that crowd source solutions.<p>I really have no idea why the hell there's a $75 minimum fee, that's absolutely ridiculous!
Funny that governments always cite safety concerns, and yet I can't find any research that shows that services like Uber are less safe than taking a traditional cab.<p>What I do see are lots of lawsuits from incumbents about "unfair competition".