12/29/2025
Uber getting its license back in York sounds like good news at first. But when you look closer, it feels more like business as usual. People who live and work there are saying the same problems are still around. Disabled riders don’t feel better served. Local drivers feel pushed out. And traffic feels more crowded. The license came back, but the experience didn’t really change.
A big part of the issue is accountability. Uber operates under a different label than local taxis, and that creates gaps. Drivers can come in from other cities, work the area without knowing it well, and leave without much connection to the community. Meanwhile, local drivers live there, pay local fees, and serve riders with specific needs. One model is built for scale. The other is built for responsibility. Scale usually wins.
Accessibility makes this even clearer. When service for wheelchair users depends on whether enough drivers decide to opt in, that’s not a real commitment — it’s a “maybe.” If something takes more time or effort, it often gets pushed aside. That tells you what the system values, and what it doesn’t.
This isn’t just a York story. It’s a reminder of what happens when platforms grow faster than ownership. Drivers don’t control the customer, the rules, or the standards — they just work inside them. That’s why more drivers are starting to think differently and look at private rides. When you build direct relationships and run your own service, accountability comes back naturally. You know your customers, you set your standards, and the work actually belongs to you. Not because a platform says so — but because you own it.