Montreal

Uber 'here to stay:' Quebec Transport Minister Jacques Daoust

Saying Uber and other disruptive technologies are "here to stay," Quebec's new transport minister, Jacques Daoust, called for a parliamentary commission to study how to level the playing field between taxis and ride-hailing apps.

New minister calls for parliamentary commission to figure out new rules to ensure level playing field

An Uber logo on a smartphone next to a taxi sign on top of a cab.
The union representing some 4,000 Montreal taxi drivers has filed a request for a permanent injunction that would declare Uber illegal in Quebec. (Kai Pfaffenbach/Reuters)

Saying Uber and other disruptive technologies are "here to stay," Quebec's new transport minister, Jacques Daoust, called for a parliamentary commission to study how to level the playing field between taxis and ride-hailing apps.

In a statement, Daoust said technologies that allow unlicensed drivers to make money transporting people is a global phenomenon that won't go away.

"At the same time, everyone recognizes the importance for the taxi industry to modernize. In this context, the status quo is not an option," Daoust said.

"We must put in place rules that ensure the end of unfair competition."

The commission would hear from the main players in the current spat between taxi drivers and Uber, the mobile app company that allows almost anyone with a recent-model car to give lifts for money.

Uber welcomed the news, saying it will be happy to collaborate with the commission.

"Since we arrived in Quebec, we've asked for regulations that frame urban ride-sharing," Uber spokesperson Jean-Christophe De Le Rue said in a statement.

​Daoust's announcement comes one day after the union representing some 4,000 taxi drivers in Montreal filed a request for a permanent injunction to ban Uber in Quebec.

The minister said the Uber controversy is a high-priority issue, and he will propose the parliamentary commission to the National Assembly "in the coming weeks."