Thursday, June 18, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C.-Based Coalition Launches Campaign To Bring Ride-Hailing To The Province

Darpan News Desk IANS, 07 Feb, 2018 11:46 AM
    VANCOUVER — Eight organizations in British Columbia are joining forces to advocate for ride-hailing services in the province as soon as possible.
     
     
    The Ridesharing Now BC coalition has been formed by groups including the Vancouver Board of Trade, BC Business Council, Canadian National Institute for the Blind and San Francisco-based on-demand transportation company Lyft.
     
     
    A news release from the coalition says it has launched a letter-writing campaign to B.C. politicians calling for a competitive ride-hailing industry "that can deliver much-needed choice to B.C. passengers."
     
     
    Supporters are directed to the www.ridesharingnow.com website, where they can sign and email a letter to their representative in the legislature calling for speedy introduction of ride-hailing services.
     
     
    Coalition spokesman Ian Tostenson says politics, rather than public opinion, is driving decision making in Victoria.
     
     
     
    He says the government sets the conditions that will attract ride-hailing services to B.C., and warns it should not be taken for granted that companies such as Lyft and Uber will inevitably operate in the province.
     
     
    "The B.C. government appears to be moving toward a model that would simply replace the taxi monopoly with a one-app monopoly that favours taxis," Tostenson says in the release.
     
     
    Other anchor members of the coalition include the Vancouver Economic Commission, BC Chamber of Commerce, Finger Food Studios, the BC Restaurant and Foodservices Association and the Urban Development Institute.
     
     
    Anne McMullin, president and chief executive officer of the institute's Pacific region says balanced, well-planned communities depend on convenient, reliable and affordable transportation options.
     
     
     
    "The Urban Development Institute is strongly encouraging the B.C. government to follow the lead of over 40 other Canadian jurisdictions that already benefit from ride-sharing, and take immediate action to introduce a framework to enable a competitive market for ride-sharing that increases choice for passengers," McMullin says.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Yazidi Refugee Effort Proof That Government Listens And Can Work: Rona Ambrose

    Yazidi Refugee Effort Proof That Government Listens And Can Work: Rona Ambrose
    At a time when people are losing faith in democratic institutions, the ability of opposition and government to come together to do what was right for Yazidis is proof the system can work, she said. 

    Yazidi Refugee Effort Proof That Government Listens And Can Work: Rona Ambrose

    Woman, Her Mother And 2 Kids Die In Collision On Highway West Of Timmins, Ont.

    Woman, Her Mother And 2 Kids Die In Collision On Highway West Of Timmins, Ont.
    Ontario Provincial Police say the four members of a Chapleau, Ont., family died in a collision Thursday morning on Highway 101 in northeastern Ontario.

    Woman, Her Mother And 2 Kids Die In Collision On Highway West Of Timmins, Ont.

    Thieves Make Off With A Lot Of Cheese From Southwestern Ontario Business

    Thieves Make Off With A Lot Of Cheese From Southwestern Ontario Business
    Ontario Provincial Police say the Village Cheese Mill in South West Oxford Township, east of London, Ont., was broken into earlier this week and "a large quantity of cheese" was taken from a walk-in cooler.

    Thieves Make Off With A Lot Of Cheese From Southwestern Ontario Business

    Accused N.S. Doctor Gets Go-Ahead To Resume Practice — With A Chaperone

    Accused N.S. Doctor Gets Go-Ahead To Resume Practice — With A Chaperone
    NEW GLASGOW, N.S. — A Nova Scotia physician charged with voyeurism after medical clinic staff were surreptitiously filmed in the washroom has approval to practice again.

    Accused N.S. Doctor Gets Go-Ahead To Resume Practice — With A Chaperone

    Fort McMurray Fire Chiefs Retires, Says No Regrets In Handling Of Wildfire

    Fort McMurray Fire Chiefs Retires, Says No Regrets In Handling Of Wildfire
    Darby Allen celebrated his retirement by having cake with colleagues on Thursday.

    Fort McMurray Fire Chiefs Retires, Says No Regrets In Handling Of Wildfire

    Judge Ends Manslaughter Case Against N.B. Police Officers In Shooting

    Judge Ends Manslaughter Case Against N.B. Police Officers In Shooting
    Const. Patrick Bulger and Const. Mathieu Boudreau were charged in the death of 51-year-old Michel Vienneau, who was shot in his vehicle outside the Bathurst train station on Jan. 12, 2015.

    Judge Ends Manslaughter Case Against N.B. Police Officers In Shooting