Articles Posted in Uber

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Introduction: The Debate Over Uber Driver Classification

The rise of the gig economy has transformed how work is defined, marketed, and regulated. At the center of this transformation is Uber, a company that has built its business model on classifying drivers as independent contractors rather than employees. This classification allows Uber to avoid providing benefits, minimum wage protections, and payroll tax contributions.

However, economic analysis challenges this narrative. Research by Lawrence Mishel provides a detailed examination of Uber driver compensation, work structure, and economic dependency, revealing a reality that diverges sharply from the independent contractor model . When viewed through an economic lens rather than a legal label, Uber drivers exhibit characteristics that align far more closely with traditional employees.

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Introduction

Uber and other rideshare services have transformed transportation in Chicago, making it easier than ever to get around the city. However, the rise in rideshare usage has also led to an increase in Uber-related accidents. When these accidents happen, determining liability and pursuing compensation can be complicated. A rideshare accident lawyer in Chicago can help injured victims understand their rights, navigate insurance policies, and pursue the compensation they deserve.

If you were injured in an Uber accident in Chicago, knowing what steps to take immediately after the crash can significantly impact your ability to recover damages for medical expenses, lost income, and pain and suffering.

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Corporate defendants often rely on a familiar playbook: rotate employees, claim ignorance, and hope the passage of time erases responsibility. But in Illinois, the law does not allow corporations to wipe the slate clean simply by losing or replacing the people who once knew the truth.

This is the concept of corporate memory, and it is one of the most effective legal tools available to trial lawyers. It allows us to expose what a corporation actually knew, when it knew it, and how that knowledge relates to the harm suffered by our clients. Corporate memory is not tied to an individual person. It belongs to the corporation itself.

The leading Illinois case on this principle, Campen v. Executive House, confirms that once a corporation learns of a dangerous condition, a prior bad act, or a foreseeable risk, that knowledge becomes part of the corporation. It cannot be “discharged” through turnover. It cannot be forgotten because a new manager arrived last year. And it cannot be erased by convenient claims of “I wasn’t here then.”

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Understanding the Real Meaning of Trial Work

Trial work is more than standing before a jury and delivering sharp arguments—it’s the art and discipline of guiding a case from uncertainty to clarity. At its heart, trial work is a blend of preparation, persuasion, and performance. It’s the work that tests a lawyer’s instincts, judgment, composure, and command of the law.

Good trial work has always been about more than theatrics. The real craft lies in understanding how facts, people, and law interact once a case steps into a courtroom. A trial lawyer lives in that intersection, translating complexity into narratives that judges and juries can not only follow, but believe.

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It seems like the future of ride share is the development of autonomous vehicles and other forms of automated transportation.  The safety ramifications related to this new technology cannot be overstated.  Thankfully, the federal government has been working on a solution to foreseeable problems in this arena.  We are reserving judgment on the effectiveness of the solutions being proposed in Washington.  We are grateful that an effort is being made. The Chair of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, Frank Pallone (NJ Democrat), said yesterday , “We are working on a bipartisan, bicameral basis to draft a self-driving car bill that will help ensure that these life-saving technologies are safety deployed.”

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To date, the federal government has offered guidance but no hard and fast rules (law) regulating self driving vehicles.  From the prospective of the consumer, this is problematic.  The major players in the self driving vehicle landscape, like Uber, Lyft, Google and other ride share companies, stand to benefit from lack of oversight.  The less regulation, the more profit for these corporate behemoths.  The problem with this approach is the lack of accountability to the consumer.  Dollars and cents are not the only measure of success.  Safety should be the number one concern of all of the implementers of this radical new technology.  Autonomous vehicles are an opportunity to change the world for the better.  Leaving the early regulation of this technology in the hands of Uber and Google is the same as letting the fox guard the hen house.

We have vast experience with ride share litigation.  Our clients have benefited greatly from our experience in this specialized area of the law.  We have pioneered techniques to overcome the ride share world’s argument that the drivers are independent contractors.  If you have been injured in a ride share vehicle, call us for a consultation at no cost.

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