Sponsored link
Friday, November 7, 2025

Sponsored link

FeaturedExclusiveSF pays $58,000 for Uber and Lyft rides

SF pays $58,000 for Uber and Lyft rides

City employees reimbursed for 1,664 rides in the past year with companies that have labor trouble and are trying to destroy public transit -- and that violates city policy.

-

San Francisco spent almost $58,000 in the past year reimbursing city employees for rides on Uber and Lyft, public records show.

Records obtained from the Controller’s Office and the Mayor’s Office under the Sunshine Ordinance show public employees took 1,664 rides with the two “transportation network companies.”

Protesters challenge Uber’s economic inequality. Photo by William Fitzgerald

Supervisor Aaron Peskin, who heads the county Transporation Authority, said that paying for Uber and Lyft rides is “counter to the policy that has been set by the Board of Supervisors and the TA.”

The TA, he told me, has consistently refused to spend public money on Uber and Lyft.

In the context of a $12 billion city budget, $57,958 isn’t a big number – but it’s a big deal to the beleaguered taxi industry, which was devastated by illegal Uber and Lyft competition while the city looked the other way.

“This is outrageous,” Mark Gruber, a cab driver and member of the Executive Board of the San Francisco Taxi Workers Alliance. “After everything the city has done, you would think they could support their own, local, regulated taxi industry.”

And, of course, Uber in particular has terrible labor problems and is trying to attack public transit.

Typically the city refuses to do business with companies that have bad labor records.

The rides the taxpayers are paying for range from the normal business-travel stuff to the ridiculous.

When mayoral staffer Edward McCaffrey went to the Conference of Mayors in Washington, DC in January, he took an Uber from home to SFO ($32.15), and Uber from Dulles Airport to the hotel ($39.39) and another Uber from the hotel back to Dulles ($46.39).

That’s about the same price those rides would have cost in a normal taxicab.

Then one mayoral staffer took Uber to Gymboree’s office on Stevenson St. and to LinkedIn’s office on Second Street for meetings, at a cost of $30.74. Apparently Muni – which runs regularly down Market Street from City Hall — isn’t good enough for the Mayor’s Office.

The largest department spending came from Public Health, which spend $10,972 on Uber and Lyft. The Human Services Agency spent $7,675. Even the MTA, which runs Muni, spent $2,713.

Sup. Shamann Walton, who has been pushing for better regulations on Uber and Lyft, told me that it’s still hard to get a cab in the Southeast part of the city, which is also badly served by Muni.

“So everyone’s situation is different,” he said. “But I would hope and encourage all of us to use public transit as much as possible.”

48 Hills welcomes comments in the form of letters to the editor, which you can submit here. We also invite you to join the conversation on our FacebookTwitter, and Instagram

Tim Redmond
Tim Redmond
Tim Redmond has been a political and investigative reporter in San Francisco for more than 30 years. He spent much of that time as executive editor of the Bay Guardian. He is the founder of 48hills.
Sponsored link
Sponsored link

Featured

A communal nexus where young dancers could connect—and possibilities ignite

With 'Ignite' and 'Flux and Form,' artists are creating supportive spaces and showcases in the face of devastating cuts.

‘Data Trust’ envisions a technology of equity

At San José Institute of Contemporary Art, Stephanie Dinkins asks how (and whose) stories can be passed on digitally.

The death of a Lucky, and the rise (again) of a food desert in Bayview Hunters Point

With little notice, a grocery store once promoted as a 'game changer' shuts down—just as people are losing their SNAP benefits

More by this author

‘Let’s bring some of those vittles back to the table:’ What the Nov. 4 election means

Economic populism seems to be working. Siding with Trump doesn't. Where does the Democratic Party go now?

Rich Family Zoning Plan delayed again as data shows it will not lower rents

State Sen. Scott Wiener was (finally) front and center in the debate over a plan that has no funding or provisions for affordable housing

Dorsey pushes an end to Housing First—and an end to controls on government spying

Supes oust Prop. C author from commission as Dorsey calls for an end to tight limits on surveillance technology
Sponsored link

You might also likeRELATED