California legislatures have made their first step to passing legislation that would tie in employers like Uber and Lyft to paying their drivers as employees.
“For the average driver (Dynamex) might as well not have happened,” said Christian Perea, a Uber driver based in Berkeley and founder of Hustle by Design, a web publication about ride sharing. Perea added that neither Uber nor Lyft had communicated to the drivers any information about the Dynamex judgment.