Washington state lawmakers consider statewide ridesharing rules

Taxi drivers protest against transportation network companies such as Uber and Lyft along with Assembly Bill 2293 at the State Capitol in Sacramento, California, June 25, 2014. REUTERS/Max Whittaker

By Victoria Cavaliere

SEATTLE (Reuters) - Lawmakers in Washington state considered legislation on Monday to regulate smartphone-enabled car services like Uber and Lyft, possibly overriding rules imposed in Seattle last year to manage how the companies compete with traditional taxis.

In July, Seattle Mayor Ed Murray announced new guidelines that removed a cap on the number of drivers for transportation network companies while also awarding new taxi medallions in a bid to appease competing interests hungry for fares in the largest city in the Pacific Northwest.

The proposed state legislation, which was taken up by the state Senate's transportation committee, would standardize rules for ridesharing companies operating in other cities in the state, including Spokane and Tacoma.

The law would ensure a "driver's compliance with insurance, qualification, conduct, nondiscrimination, maximum work hours, criminal history, and driving record requirements," the bill states.

Specifically, it would require that insurance policies are valid from when the driver is logged on to the system, and not just when a passenger is in the car. Rideshare companies would be required to submit quarterly reports on coverage and driving records.

Some Seattle officials were concerned the state measure would derail a hard-fought compromise in the city of about 630,000 people, where the popularity of ridesharing has soared in recent years.

"The city has expressed to the bill's sponsor that as the process unfolds it will be critical that the protections we have in place are not diminished," Denise Movius of Seattle's Finance and Administrative Services told the Seattle Times newspaper.

Opposition to Uber, Lyft and similar companies has risen among local officials in U.S. cities and traditional taxi drivers, who argue the upstarts do not face the same stringent regulations and insurance requirements as traditional cabs.

Uber said it looked forward to working with leaders across Washington state "to create a permanent home for ridesharing services like Uber in the Evergreen State," said spokesman Michael Amodeo.

In September, California Governor Jerry Brown signed a law requiring ridesharing companies' insurance to cover drivers from the moment they turn on their app, not just from when they accept a ride on their app.

(Reporting by Victoria Cavaliere in Seattle; Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Eric Walsh)