Tag: Uber

  • Young Punks The Bane Of Taxi Drivers

    Young Punks The Bane Of Taxi Drivers

    Instead, the easy-going veteran cabby prefers to take everything in his stride.

    He told The New Paper: “To tell you the truth, the bad overrides the good most of the time (in this industry). Perhaps it is my nature to forget them and not take them to heart.

    “The day is still long, tomorrow will be a better day. So as far as possible, I try to make it easier on myself so that the job is less stressful.

    “We give and take, we cannot take things too hard to survive in this world.”

    So how does he deal with difficult passengers or bad days?

    Mr Gan takes coffee breaks, sometimes with his ‘kakis’ to recharge. TNP PHOTO: Noor Ashikin Abdul Rahman

     

    “If I can sense that the passengers are (up to no good) and purposely making me drive all around the island, I will advise them to split cabs as that is more cost-effective for them. Usually, I’m pretty successful,” he said.

    And if passengers end up evading the fare, he let it slide.

    “If it’s only $10 or $20 then it’s not a big bomb. Is it worth making you so unhappy? Forget it,” said Mr Gan, who drives a Trans-Cab taxi.

    Mr Gan, who does the early shift, became a taxi driver in 1990 after his renovation business failed.

    The sole breadwinner and father of three grown children has been with multiple taxi companies over the years, including Comfort and CityCab.

    On weekdays, he usually starts at about 6.30am and ends at 5.30pm.

    Mr Gan with some of his fellow cabby buddies at lunch. TNP PHOTO: NOOR ASHIKIN ABDUL RAHMAN

     

    He might be in his 60s and has been in the trade for far longer than his younger counterparts but he is far from “jaded”.

    Eager to learn and improve himself, Mr Gan signed up as a driver-partner with ride-hailing service GrabCar in 2013.

    He had initial reservations about the service but was eager to try it out for himself.

    He admitted that many of his friends – both taxi drivers and non-taxi drivers alike – constantly debated the pros and cons of ride-hailing services like GrabCar.

    “There was even quarrelling among ourselves, with some saying that it was stealing their rice bowl. I told them, ‘If you can’t beat them, join them. Why not?” he said.

    According to Mr Gan, he has enjoyed a 15 per cent increase in income since joining GrabCar.

    Before this, he earned anything from $20 to $100 daily.

    But a steady income is little comfort for some of his cabby friends within his age group.

    “Some of them are not willing to learn, some are also stubborn. But I always tell them that is they are not willing to change or upgrade, they will become obsolete one day,” he said.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • 18-Year-Old Uber Passenger Dies After Accident On Seletar Expressway

    18-Year-Old Uber Passenger Dies After Accident On Seletar Expressway

    A teenage girl has died after the private-hire car she was riding in ran into a lorry on the Seletar Expressway (SLE).

    Police said that the accident happened along the SLE towards the Bukit Timah Expressway, and involved a car, a lorry and a van.

    They collided near the Woodlands Avenue 2 exit at about 3.40am on Sunday (Sept 25). None were trapped in the vehicles, said the Singapore Civil Defence Force.

    The van driver and two car passengers were conveyed to Khoo Teck Puat hospital, police said.

    The Straits Times understands that the van’s driver, a 22-year-old man, was conveyed unconscious.

    One of the car passengers, Ms Goh Pei Ling, 18, has died of her injuries.

    The other passenger was her sister-in-law, who just held her wedding with Ms Goh’s brother last Friday, Lianhe Wanbao reported.

    They were returning to Chua Chu Kang from Pasir Ris in a Uber vehicle, the Chinese evening daily said.

    Her sister-in-law, 20, has taken to social media to express her grief and guilt at not being able to help save Ms Goh.

    Police investigation are ongoing.

     

    Source: The Straits Times

  • Uber Suspends Driver Who Bragged About Drinking

    Uber Suspends Driver Who Bragged About Drinking

    Ms Nicole Lee was hanging out at Clarke Quay into the early hours of a recent Sunday when she decided to book an Uber ride to her home in Clementi.

    The journey took just 30 minutes but it was a “horrifying” ride, said the trade publications editor.

    Soon after getting into the car, the Uber driver bragged that he had been out drinking before he picked her up at 4.12am.

    Despite repeated requests by Ms Lee, 23, to be let out of his car, he insisted on going ahead with the trip. He kept offering to take her to a house party, and also asked her out to supper.

    He later asked for her phone number and would not let her out of the car at her destination until she complied.

    Private-hire car service Uber confirmed with The Sunday Times last Monday that the driver – who it has not named – has been suspended and investigations are ongoing.

    This month, Uber also suspended another driver, apparently over a passenger complaint that he had allowed someone else to ferry passengers using his account. Uber said it could not reveal details of either case, due to privacy policies between drivers and passengers.

    Mr Leigh Wong, Uber’s head of communications for Singapore and Malaysia, said: “Our standard operating procedure in these instances is to wait-list the driver’s account, then pending an investigation, to address any issues accordingly.”

    Ms Lee, however, wants to know how the driver will be dealt with, and if he will be “blacklisted”.

    Recounting the events of that morning, Ms Lee said she continued with the ride as she thought the driver – who looked to be in his 20s – was just showing off about his drinking habits and he also appeared to be able to drive well.

    But she said her fears that he may have had too much to drink were revived when they approached a police roadblock near Ngee Ann Polytechnic at about 4.30am. “He panicked and told me – ‘I cannot take the (breathalyser) test’. At the roadblock, he told the police that he was an Uber driver and was taking me home. They let him pass,” she said.

    Ms Lee said he later asked for her phone number and refused to let her out of the car unless she complied. “At that point, I was quite eager to go home, so I gave it to him,” she said, adding that she wanted to elicit a “confession” from him later that he had been drinking.

    In a WhatsApp conversation Ms Lee showed to The Sunday Times, the driver replied “200 for 2 towers or one bottle of Chivas”, when she asked him about his drinking.

    The Sunday Times tried but could not contact the driver. In the Uber app, drivers and passengers are known to each other only by their account names, which may not be their real names.

    When asked by The Sunday Times, Uber did not say how many drivers it has suspended.

    Grab, the other major player in the ride-hailing industry here, assured commuters that terminations made up a “very small percentage of the total number of Grab drivers”.

    “We investigate all complaints or reports of errant drivers, and then carefully consider, against our promulgated code of conduct, the best action to take… Errant drivers will be penalised with actions ranging from warnings to suspension,” said Mr Lim Kell Jay, head of Grab Singapore.

    Ms Lee said she will still use Uber. “Because it’s cheap, I’m still taking Uber. But now I stay off Uber past midnight and will take a taxi, since it’s properly licensed,” she added.

     

    Source: The Straits Times

  • Ridjal Noor: Youths Taking “Free-Agent” Route Will Be Lost Generation Of Tomorrow

    Ridjal Noor: Youths Taking “Free-Agent” Route Will Be Lost Generation Of Tomorrow

    I fear the Uber/Grab/Deliveroo workforce of today will culminate in one of the biggest lost generation of tomorrow.

    We need to work doubly hard to ensure that we don’t go through 10-20 years of having highly educated workforce doing menial labour without a long-term payoff.

    No CPF, no benefits, medical, skills training, upgrading etc.

    As it is today, the 40+ year old PMEs of today are struggling to find footing into the workforce again, once they get unseated from their jobs. It’s already so tough. But at least they have the 10-20 years of relevant experience to bolster their search.

    The 20 year old degree holder who throws away a career path to go the Uber route (free agent) might have freedom today but should relentlessly prepare for life in the 40s. Keep learning and building always.

     

    Source: Ridjal Noor

  • Uber Driver Kai Jin Cancelled Booking Because Passenger Wears Hijab

    Uber Driver Kai Jin Cancelled Booking Because Passenger Wears Hijab

    Rilek1Corner,

    Ni Uber driver kurang ajar. The sis wear white hijab. This idiot drive past and then cancel becos he don’t take people cover like dat.

    Qyshia Santoz

    Dia ingat dia saper? We live in country with a lot of race and religion. If he cannot take it he migrate better.

    Sometimes want to get cab also difficult This sis get cab but get rejected because she wear hijab.

    Driver name is Kai Jin and he drive black Mistubishi lancer.

    Racist Uber Driver Identity

    Must condemn this driver.

    Since when can anyhow pick and choose your passenger? Drunk and rowdy passenger is one thing but how is hijab offensive?

    Mamat

    [Reader Contribution]