Illegal ride-hailing services busted in Richmond, B.C. - Action News
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British Columbia

Illegal ride-hailing services busted in Richmond, B.C.

Twelve drivers illegally running ride-hailing services in Richmond have been reprimanded including a driver with an "N" licence and another with an expired one.

Udi Kuaiche, RaccoonGo and Dingdang Carpool under surveillance since last fall

Drivers illegally operating ride-hailing services in B.C. have been fined as part of a coordinated effort between the City of Richmond, RCMP and the Passenger Transportation Board. (Tero Vesalainen/Shutterstock)

Twelve drivers illegally running ride-hailing services in Richmond, B.C., have been reprimanded including a new driver with an "N" licence and another with an expired one.

"What it highlights is if a person uses one of these unregulated rideappsyou're getting into a stranger's vehicle and there's no guarantee of anything," said Richmond Mayor Malcolm Brodie.

In awritten statement, the City of Richmond said the drivers were targeted as part of a joint effort between the city, the province's Passenger Transportation Branch and RCMP over the past two weeks.

The PTBissuedfines of $1,150for the drivers, and the city issued each of the drivers tickets for:

  • Operating a business without a licence.
  • Failure to display a chauffeur's permit.
  • Failure to display a tariff card.

The RCMPalso issued five ticketsand one vehicle was towed.

The city said companiesincludingLongmao, UdiKuaiche, RaccoonGoand Dingdang Carpool, launched ride-hailing appsand have been the subject of ongoing enforcement from the PTBsince last fall.

Brodiesaid the services were difficult to detect many of the illegal services only respond to people who speak Chinese or another language.

"Who knows who's operating these apps. They're probablyin some other country they're certainly not in your city," he said.

"And so you can't enforce anything against the apps themselves, you have to take all your actions against the drivers."

Ride hailing is illegal in British Columbia. The province is still considering permitting services like Uber and Lyft, despite a pre-election promise to do so by the end of 2017.

The city said that, to date, the PTBhas issued 20 cease and desist orders and 23 fines of $1,150 to drivers operating without a licence.

"It's important for drivers working through theseapps[to know]that it is actually them that's assuming all of the risk," saidPTBdirector KristinVanderkuip.

"They're the ones who are operating illegally and would be subject to the fine.They may also be subject to bylaw fines or other sanctions from their insurer or their lease company for not disclosing the commercial use of their vehicle."

The PTB also emphasized that some of the drivers had prior driving infractions and hadn't been required to completea criminal record check.