Saturday, June 27, 2026
ADVT 
National

Poll Suggests Support For A Regulated Uber

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Feb, 2016 11:40 AM
    TORONTO — An Angus Reid Institute online poll has found that most respondents don't support banning Uber, but would like to see the ride-hailing service regulated like much like the taxi industry.
     
    Two-thirds of the 1,503 people who responded to the poll conducted late last month said Uber should be regulated. But more than 70 per cent said they were open to Uber operating in their communities, with only one in six saying they'd support an Uber ban.
     
    Only one in 10 of the respondents said they'd actually used sharing-economy companies like Uber and Airbnb, although they were familiar with them.
     
     
    The poll is being released as taxi drivers in Toronto have called off plans for anti-Uber protests to coincide with the NBA's upcoming all-star weekend festivities in the city.
     
    Earlier this week, Montreal taxi and limousine drivers targeted the city's airport part of their protest against Uber, promising to increase pressure tactics if the company doesn't suspend operations.
     
    Taxi drivers in Toronto, Montreal and other Canadian cities argue that Uber is unfairly sapping their business because it isn't subject to the same fees and regulations that govern the taxi industry.
     
    There was a generational divide among the respondents to the online survey, with those younger expressing more support for an unfettered Uber than older respondents.
     
    The survey's respondents are part of the Angus Reid Forum, a 130,000-member panel of Canadians who participate in surveys and discussions. Angus Reid says the forum comprises of people in each major demographic group, and respondents receive a small monetary incentive — from $1 to $5 — for completing each survey.
     
     
    The polling industry's professional body, the Marketing Research and Intelligence Association, says online surveys cannot be assigned a margin of error because they do not randomly sample the population.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Alberta's Education Minister David Eggen Tells Schools To Come Up With LGBTQ Policy

    Alberta's Education Minister David Eggen Tells Schools To Come Up With LGBTQ Policy
    Alberta's education minister has sent a letter to school boards in the province reminding them that provincial law requires them to create a safe learning environment for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer students.

    Alberta's Education Minister David Eggen Tells Schools To Come Up With LGBTQ Policy

    B.C. Man 3rd Person Charged In 2014 Death Of Northwestern Alberta Man

    B.C. Man 3rd Person Charged In 2014 Death Of Northwestern Alberta Man
    Twenty-seven-year-old Devin Pisch of Grande Prairie was killed on June 25, 2014.

    B.C. Man 3rd Person Charged In 2014 Death Of Northwestern Alberta Man

    NDP Will Be Progressive Opposition Focused On Fighting Inequality: Tom Mulcair

    Mulcair told the Canadian Union of Public Employee's national convention on Friday that his party will be a strong, progressive opposition and hold the federal Liberal government to account.

    NDP Will Be Progressive Opposition Focused On Fighting Inequality: Tom Mulcair

    Hunt On For New Site Away From Parliament Hill To Host Marquee Canada Day Party

    Hunt On For New Site Away From Parliament Hill To Host Marquee Canada Day Party
    OTTAWA — Federal officials are on the hunt for a new location for the country's marquee party for Canada Day celebrations.

    Hunt On For New Site Away From Parliament Hill To Host Marquee Canada Day Party

    Federal Employees At Federal Affairs Give Justin Trudeau Rock-star Reception

    Federal Employees At Federal Affairs Give Justin Trudeau Rock-star Reception
     Hundreds of usually buttoned-down federal civil servants gave Justin Trudeau and other members of his cabinet a rock-star reception Friday at the Lester B. Pearson building in downtown Ottawa.

    Federal Employees At Federal Affairs Give Justin Trudeau Rock-star Reception

    How Stephen Harper's Old Schoolmate Bill McKibben Helped Kill The Keystone XL Pipeline

    How Stephen Harper's Old Schoolmate Bill McKibben Helped Kill The Keystone XL Pipeline
    "I understand Canadian politics just enough to know that petrocrat Stephen Harper is out of a job," McKibben tweeted as the federal election results rolled in. 

    How Stephen Harper's Old Schoolmate Bill McKibben Helped Kill The Keystone XL Pipeline