Montreal

Is there life after Uber? What Montreal could learn from Austin, Texas

If ride-hailing giant Uber carries through with its threat to pack up and leave Montreal next month, the city might want to look to the example of Austin, Texas about how to fill the void.

Uber left town, but ride-hailing in Austin survived and thrived with new models - for a little while, at least

Ryan Murphy and Lindsey Jones are seen waiting for an Uber in Austin, Texas. Uber, along with its competitor Lyft, suspended service in the city last year, after voters there decided not to overturn city requirements for drivers of ride-hailing companies that include undergoing fingerprint-based background checks. (Stephen Spillman/American Statesman via AP)

If ride-hailing giant Uber carries through with its threat to pack up and leave Montreal next month, the city might want to look to the example of Austin, Texas, about how to fill the void.

Austin is often cited as an example of a city that stood up to Uber's perceived corporate bullying and won, refusing to blink in a regulatory showdown with the multinational giant with deep pockets.

Uber left town, but ride-hailing in Austin survived and thrived with new models.

For a little while, at least.

Parallels with Quebec

Uber arrived in Austin in 2014 and quickly became popular in the city known for universities, music festivals and tech companies.

But like Quebec, as Uber's popularity grew, local governments tried to introduce regulations, and Uber chafed.

Jean-Nicolas Guillemette, Uber Quebec's general manager, speaks at a news conference in Montreal on Tuesday. Ride-hailing company Uber says it will cease operating in Quebec next month if the province doesn't rescind new rules introduced last week. (Ryan Remiorz/Canadian Press)

The main sticking point came when the City of Austin wanted to require all Uber drivers to get a fingerprint background check administered by the city.

Uber argued that requirement was too arduous and wouldn't work with its business model.

Uber gathered signatures from its members to put the new rules to a vote as a ballot initiative and spent millions trying to persuade people to side with them.

The move backfired. Voters sided with the city.  

The day after the result was announced in May 2016, Uber left town.

Non-profit steps up

That's when a group of tech entrepreneurs in Austin decided to do something to fill the void.

They invested money and expertise to develop their own ride-hailing service, called RideAustin.

RideAustin started as a non-profit ride-hailing service in Austin, Texas after Uber left town in May 2016. (RideAustin)
"There is life without Uber, and you can definitely set up your own successful ride-share organization,"  Bobbi Kommineni, vice-president of strategic programs and operations for RideAustin, told CBC.

"The key difference is that we're non-profit. We didn't build RideAustin to make money. We built RideAustin as a service to the community," she said.

Kommineni said it took about a month to develop the app. RideAustin hired many ex-Uber drivers who'd been left in the lurch when the company left town.  And because it was set up as a non-profit, drivers were able to earn a lot more.

While Uber takes a cut of at least 20 per cent of each fare, RideAustin only takes a $2 booking fee, with 100 per cent of the fare going to the driver. 

'We grew very, very fast'

Kommineni said they started off slowly in June 2016.

Bobbi Kommineni with RideAustin said the company's strength is that it's non-profit.
"I think on the first day we did 116 rides, and we thought, 'Oh wow, that's great.' We were operating in one zip code of Austin downtown," she said.

"We grew very, very fast. Once people knew we were available, they were using us across the city," Kommineni said.

She said by last spring, RideAustin was averaging about 60,000 rides a week.

Other small startups and ride-hailing services moved into Austin as well and flourished.

Uber was gone, but life went on. Some said for the better.

Then Uber came back.

Uber tough to compete against

From the time it left Austin, Uber began lobbying politicians at the state level in Texas.

The company eventually convinced them to adopt a new law essentially overruling Austin's local law requiring drivers to get fingerprint background checks.

Last May, Uber returned to Austin. Some of the smaller ride-sharing services left town.

Kommineni admitted that Uber's return almost instantly cut RideAustin's market share in half.

Susan Shaheen, co-director of the Transportation Sustainability Research Center at the University of California at Berkeley, said the Uber model is difficult for customers to resist, even when they have a viable local alternative.

"Uber has that scale and that distribution, so people perhaps wait less time to make that ride match. We know that wait times are part of the success factors of these companies," Shaheen said.

"Another major factor is that larger companies such as Uber subsidize rides, so they're cheaper," she said.

Alternatives still possible

Kommineni said RideAustin will soldier on, focusing on the advantages it has over Uber.

"We're local. We're a non-profit, and people know our drivers are better taken care of," Kommineni said.

As many Montrealers lament Uber's possible departure, Shaheen said Austin's year without Uber showed that life can go on.

"I don't necessarily see that as a tremendous obstacle to cities, as long as they have a vibrant alternative to on-demand mobility," Shaheen said.

Corrections

  • An earlier version of this story said that RideAustin takes two per cent of each fare. In fact, it charges a $2 booking fee, and the driver keeps 100 per cent of each fare.
    Sep 27, 2017 3:09 PM ET

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Steve Rukavina

Journalist

Steve Rukavina has been with CBC News in Montreal since 2002. In 2019, he won a RTDNA award for continuing coverage of sexual misconduct allegations at Concordia University. He's also a co-creator of the podcast, Montreapolis. Before working in Montreal he worked as a reporter for CBC in Regina and Saskatoon. You can reach him at stephen.j.rukavina@cbc.ca.