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Ubar thursday
Ubar thursday







ubar thursday

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#Ubar thursday update#

When asked for an update on the status of the report last month, a Lyft spokesperson said the company was waiting for the Uber and CPUC dispute to be resolved before releasing it. Lyft, which similarly promised to put out a report, has yet to do so. (As part of the agreement, Uber has agreed to provide information about employees who worked on the report under seal.) Uber objected to releasing data, which it said may retraumatize survivors and appealed the fine. The CPUC wanted Uber to provide more details about the incidents, including the date, time, and location of each assault, the identity of each witness and the name and contact information of who they reported the incidents to at the time. Of those incidents, Uber disclosed that 1,243 reports of sexual assault and sexual harassment were in California, or 21% of the overall complaints. The safety transparency report, which Uber has said it plans to release every two years, revealed the company received nearly 6,000 reports of sexual assault in 20 on its platform. The probe originally stemmed from Uber’s safety transparency report in December 2019, which the company pledged to put out after a CNN investigation into sexual assault and abuse by ride-hail drivers. The CPUC said its commissioners could still reject the settlement or propose alternative terms. “We look forward to continued collaboration with the Commission to shine a light on this societal issue and help set the standard.” “We’ve been able to find a path forward that preserves the privacy and agency of sexual assault survivors,” Tony West, senior vice president and chief legal officer at Uber, said in a statement. The agreement also includes that future comprehensive data requests associated with sexual violence should be issued to the industry as a whole, rather than just Uber or any one company. (Uber has agreed to deposit the combined $9 million with the CPUC’s Fiscal Office.) Uber will also put more money into the issue, agreeing to contribute $5 million to the California Victims Compensation Board, which assists victims of violence in the state, and $4 million toward developing industry-wide efforts, including developing best practices on classifying, reporting and responding to these types of incidents. Under the terms of the deal, Uber has agreed to provide anonymized data on sexual assault incidents and give individuals reporting such incidents the ability to opt-in to being contacted by the CPUC in the future. Lyft has yet to disclose sexual assault incidents as cases grow









Ubar thursday