City
Epaper

New Zealand court declares Uber drivers as employees in landmark ruling

By IANS | Updated: October 26, 2022 10:50 IST

Wellington, Oct 26 In a landmark ruling, the Employment Court of New Zealand has declared four Uber drivers ...

Open in App

Wellington, Oct 26 In a landmark ruling, the Employment Court of New Zealand has declared four Uber drivers as proper employees of the company, paving the way for other countries to follow the suit and force the ride-hailing giant to treat its drivers as employees rather than independent contractors.

The Chief Judge of the Employment Court, Christina Inglis, found that all four drivers were employees of Uber during the periods where they performed transportation services.

The Uber drivers were part of a class-action lawsuit filed last July in the country.

The four drivers had written agreements with the various entities at different points in time between August 2016 and May 2022.

"The written agreements all specified that the entities were not employers but rather providers of the App that connects drivers to the digital platform and facilitators of the interactions on the platform," read the ruling that came out late on Tuesday.

The decision in New Zealand came after the US Department of Labor proposed sweeping changes to how gig workers should be classified.

The Employment Court highlighted the need to adopt a purposive approach to determining the status of the drivers, having regard to the applicable legislation and its role in protecting vulnerable workers, regulating the labour market, and ensuring the maintenance of minimum standards.

The court found that significant control was exerted on Uber drivers in other ways, including via incentive schemes that reward consistency and quality and withdrawal of rewards for breaches of Uber's Guidelines or for slips in quality levels, measured by user ratings.

"Drivers were restricted from forming their own relationships with riders or from organising substitute drivers to perform services on their behalf," the judge observed.

The court found that in reality, Uber exercised significant control over each of the drivers.

It held that the drivers worked for that business; it was not simply a commercial arrangement; and they did not run a business of their own.

The judgment may have a broader potential impact on other Uber drivers globally.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Employment Court of New ZealandEmployment courtChristina inglisNew ZealandWellingtonAotearoaWgn
Open in App

Related Stories

MumbaiMumbai: Crime Branch Arrests Thane Man for Rs 67 Lakh Scam Using Fake Visas and Jobs

InternationalEarthquake in New Zealand: Quake of Magnitude 6.8 Hits Riverton Coast

MumbaiMumbai Shocker: A Female posted at Australian Navy Molested In Mumbai, Accused Driver Arrested

CricketNZ vs PAK 2025: Hasan Nawaz Breaks Ex-Captain Babar Azam's Record of Scoring Fastest T20I Century For Pakistan

CricketNZ vs PAK 3rd T20I 2025: Hasan Nawaz Sets New Powerplay Record for Pakistan in T20Is

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologySouth Korea to unveil measures to restructure petrochemical industry

TechnologyIndia is expanding energy infrastructure in quest for self-reliance: Hardeep Puri

TechnologySamsung expands manufacturing of advanced tech devices in India: Ashwini Vaishnaw

TechnologyGodrej Properties’ net debt jumps 42 pc in Q1 FY26

TechnologyCII poll gives thumbs up to rollout of smart meters in power sector