Minnesota Uber and Lyft driver pay package beats deadline to win approval in Legislature

health2024-05-21 15:46:4685

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — A plan to boost pay for Uber and Lyft drivers in Minnesota that lawmakers believe would prevent the companies from leaving the market advanced in the state Legislature on Sunday before the midnight deadline.

The House passed the compensation bill but the measure was held up in the Senate before winning approval prior to the deadline for lawmakers to pass bills before they adjourned. The bill now moves to Gov. Tim Walz to be signed into law, the Star Tribune reported.

The proposal that initially gained approval in the House was crafted by Democrats to replace a minimum pay measure the Minneapolis City Council passed that prompted Uber and Lyft to threaten to leave the state’s biggest city.

The House agreement announced Saturday after a day of negotiations would set a minimum pay rate at $1.28 per mile and 31 cents per minute. Uber has said it will keep operating in the state under those rates. The bill would take effect next January if passed.

Address of this article:http://svalbard.highlanderdistrict.org/html-45c599431.html

Popular

Company wins court ruling to continue development of Michigan factory serving EV industry

Van Thinh Phat chairwoman sentenced to death in Vietnam’s biggest fraud trial — Radio Free Asia

UK economy fell into recession as people cut spending

Ukraine aid worker Chris Parry died unlawfully alongside Andrew Bagshaw, inquest hears

Kosovo prepares a new draft law on renting prison cells to Denmark after the first proposal failed

Sensitive NZ Police video evidence shuffled around US tech companies

Watch: Auckland paddleboarder 'buzzing' over interaction with orca whales

TikTok users losing access to Taylor Swift, Billie Eilish songs

LINKS