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Uber Doesn't Decrease Drunk Driving, Finds New Study (washingtonpost.com) 72

"A new study casts doubt on Uber's claim that ride-sharing has reduced drunken driving," reports the Washington Post. An anonymous Slashdot reader quotes their report: Researchers at Oxford University and the University of Southern California who examined county-level data in the United States before and after the arrival of Uber and its competitors in those markets found that ride-sharing had no effect on drinking-related or holiday- and weekend-related fatalities. One reason could be that, despite the soaring popularity of Uber and other ride-sharing services, there still may not be enough ride-share drivers available yet to make a dent on drunken driving, the authors said.

They also suggest that the tipsy riders who now call Uber are the ones who formerly would have called a taxi. For others, the odds of getting a DUI are still so low that many would prefer to gamble rather than lay out money for a ride-sharing service. Drunks, after all, are just not rational.

One reason for the low number of Uber drivers may be that the 10-year study only examined data through 2014. While other studies have found a decrease in drunk driving arrests associated with Uber -- for example, in California -- the Post's article suggests that ridesharing drivers may just be a drop in the bucket. "Although approximately 450,000 people now drive for Uber, there are 210 million licensed drivers in the United States -- and an estimated 4.2 million adults who drive impaired, the study says."
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Uber Doesn't Decrease Drunk Driving, Finds New Study

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  • It's true (Score:4, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday July 30, 2016 @10:36AM (#52611843)

    Every Uber I've taken, the driver has been wasted. I just push him out of the car and drive myself. Then I have the car towed in the morning.

    • Dude, you gotta quit drinking.

    • Drunk driving arrests increased....Fact. [keyetv.com]

      • Woah, woah, WOAH!!!! No facts man! This is /.!

        Seriously though, drinking impairs judgement. And not just the judgement you use on the road once you are driving, but more importantly, the judgement you use to decide if you are too drunk to drive in the first place. Those that are too impaired to make sound decisions will, if given the opportunity by friends or bystanders, choose to drive drunk regardless of how many options you give them. And, it is those individuals that are so blasted they end up kill

  • by MikeDataLink ( 536925 ) on Saturday July 30, 2016 @10:40AM (#52611855) Homepage Journal

    Since Uber hit the streets I can't remember the last time I drove even a little bit tipsy. There's just no need for it when for $5-6 bucks I can get home at a moments notice with zero risk of a DUI. Its incredibly affordable "insurance".

    • Since Uber hit the streets I can't remember the last time I drove even a little bit tipsy. There's just no need for it when for $5-6 bucks I can get home at a moments notice with zero risk of a DUI. Its incredibly affordable "insurance".

      Before Uber you didn't use this same logic and take a cab?

      • by MikeDataLink ( 536925 ) on Saturday July 30, 2016 @11:02AM (#52611951) Homepage Journal

        No. Because where I live (Fort Worth Suburbs) a cab could take as much as an hour to show up and cost $50 bucks. Uber brought us something we never had before. Quick access and affordability.

        • by wicka_wicka ( 679279 ) on Saturday July 30, 2016 @11:10AM (#52611985)
          An hour to show up? Where I live, Pittsburgh, you could be anywhere in the city and be unable to get a cab. You could be in the middle of downtown, call a cab, and it would never show up. Or you'd find another way home and the cab company would call you three hours later wondering where you were. Everyone I know who lived here before Uber has some story about spending four hours walking home because they couldn't get a cab. That's why I take issue with this study, particularly this line: "They also suggest that the tipsy riders who now call Uber are the ones who formerly would have called a taxi." Guess what? That wasn't always possible. Uber and Lyft gave us something we didn't have before, and in Pittsburgh specifically, there is a clear decline in DUI citations since 2013/14, when the ride sharing companies arrived. Looking only at country-level data is going to obscure Uber's impact in markets where cab service did not exist.
        • by Anonymous Coward

          No. Because where I live (Fort Worth Suburbs) a cab could take as much as an hour to show up and cost $50 bucks. Uber brought us something we never had before. Quick access and affordability.

          Uber is about $40 - $100 where I live to do the same - metro Atlanta suburbs.

          Uber and a lot of their investors proclaim ride sharing to be the innovative next great thing. I see GM and other car companies throwing billions at it and I just don't see where they expect to make their returns. IF it were to become what they expect it to be, it would mean they'd sell less cars.

          I don't get it. It's just a (slight) discount taxi service with a lot of hype. This BS of folks don't need a car anymore is complete

          • Disclaimer: I don't know anything about Atlanta.

            Kennesaw seems to be a decently distant suburb of Atlanta. From there to Downtown is 26 miles (31 minutes according to Google Maps). Uber claims it costs $23-30 on UberX. UberPOOL isn't available. That makes a big difference. A similar trip (in time and distance) where I am costs $32-40, but right now on POOL it would be $20.80. Back of the envelope math means the Atlanta trip would be $15-20 for on POOL, if it was available. That's pretty cheap when you consi
        • by casings ( 257363 )

          To my mind, what you experience is just confirming what the article is talking about. Logical folks with the means to use taxi services would have used their local system if it had been as convenient and affordable as uber and lyft. There is nothing unique to lyft or uber to truly differentiate themselves from taxi services in terms of reducing drunk driving, if taxi services chose to implement their features.

          You are not the impaired driver this article is talking about.

          This is talking about the people who

          • In theory this article and the study is about people who would have used cabs before, but the reality that is being put forward is that they are about those people being the only drunk people to use Uber.
          • Your comment is quite silly to me. The affordability and the convenience / higher level of service are the reasons uber would lower DUI. Your viewpoint is like saying there is nothing special about a car vs walking when it comes to being able to get from point A to point B except that it's faster and easier to carry things with you.

      • Before you'd have a designated driver or be the designated driver.
      • Taxis will not take you everywhere. Especially as the bars are closing, they will ask you where you're going and keep driving if it's not going to maximize their profit. That is part of the reason Uber does not allow drivers to know the destination until after accepting the ride.

    • I expect most drunk drivers are not planning on getting drunk. So they have their car at the destination so while inebriated you need to think of a way to get home and a way to get your car back the next day.

  • The people who are either arrested for DUI or are involved in an accident aren't really Internet savvy / don't have a smartphone / ask "what's an Uber". This translates into only a percentage of people know everything about the Internet and smartphones.
    • The so callee study that was posted here a while back claiming uber reduced drunk driving had so many statistical abuses that it was basically a waste of time. I haven't had a chance to check if this one is any better, but such correlations are hard to prove or disprove if you just use publicly available data.
    • Re:Let me guess (Score:4, Interesting)

      by guruevi ( 827432 ) on Saturday July 30, 2016 @10:51AM (#52611903)

      Most drunks are indeed on the lower end of the social curves, they spent all their money on booze and rarely if ever get caught. Most other people getting caught don't even recognize they are impaired, the limits are set so low in my state that you could get arrested after a single apple cider.

      That's how DUI lawyers make their money though, you pay them $2k and you're pretty much off the hook if it's your first offense because there are so many loopholes and problems with the system. Second offenses will net you a 2y record and require state-sponsored religious classes (10 step program).

  • Just like politicians they will bend the truth and say whatever they like.
  • Well, I am a longtime fan of excellent ridiculous Kung Fu films from the Hong Kong Shaw brothers from the 70's for years.

    One of their theme was "Drunken Boxer Style" : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    The hero gets tanked up . . . or pretends to get tanked up, and then defeats the bad guy with his unpredictable movements.

    What works for Kung Fu, should also work on the road . . . so Drunken Driver Style is definitely in!

  • by El Cubano ( 631386 ) on Saturday July 30, 2016 @11:07AM (#52611975)

    Could it be that outside of a small number of big cities on the east coast (NYC, Boston, DC, ???) the vast overwhelming majority of US adults drive automobiles to go practically everywhere? Combine that with our inability to plan ahead (simple human nature), and it is not a stretch to think of something like this being extremely common:

    • Time to go drinking
    • OK, I'll drive myself to the bar/party/venue
    • Crap, I've got a bit of a buzz, but if I call a taxi/uber/catch a lift then I'll have to figure out how to get back to my car tomorrow
    • It's not that bad, I only had 3 shots and 2 beers, plus I ate before I got here

    The way to make something like uber have a dent in impaired driving is for the party organizer/host to "enforce" it. For example, I attended a party a while back where one of the hosts was the entry/exit summoning ubers/taxis for people as they left if they had been drinking or didn't have a designated driver with them. Sadly, that's the only occasion where I witnessed that sort of diligence.

    The places where uber does really well are also the places where people are accustomed to and want to get around without driving themselves or owning their own cars. This sort of thing directly correlates with population density. Certainly that some suburban areas where uber does OK and provides a good service, but the vast majority of the American population is spread out over much larger and less populous areas. In a town of 1200 people with 8 bars on a downtown strip, I doubt that you will find 50 uber drivers ready to drive people home from the bars.

    The fact is, humans suck at assessing risk. We are either wilfully ignorant of the risk (i.e., we do nothing to educate ourselves) or we don't care (i.e., I can do what I want, regardless of the impact/consequences to myself and others). This is why phishing, malware, and social engineering are such problems. This is also why people die of coronary diseases from a lifetime of poor diet and poor fitness, from smoking-related illnesses, and why people still drive impaired and get themselves and/or others killed.

    • Or...

      When an Uber Driver sees an indication that you want to be picked up near a bar, he has a few shots before he shows up. That would explain why Uber doesn't decrease drunk driving....
  • They say 450.000 people are driving for Uber, but the interesting number should be the number of customers riding with Uber.
    Further more, I think we really need to know how many are riding around midnight, or other times when people are most likely to be driving drunk.
    If all Uber drivers are working when almost nobody was driving drunk anyway it's very unlikely they affect the statistics very much.

    It may also be that many people riding with Uber are people who used to be the designated driver, now think
  • This is another misinterpreted result. Probably intentionally to get clicks. Not finding an effect is different from finding no effect.

    Logically, it's quite silly to claim that everyone who calling an uber would have called a taxi. Taxis have a cost and ubers have a lower cost. This is like saying the opening of a McDonald's doesn't increase burger consumption because everyone patronizing would have previously patronized the 100% hippie-bullshit-fed $20 burger shop next door. Of course MOST people calling a

  • The majority of who I know that ride share, ride share intra-city. The odds of being picked up while driving drunk in the city are much lower than someone who commuted 20 miles into the city, gets drunk, then has to drive 20 miles back home.

    In addition you still have the issue of getting back down to your vehicle the next day. So you're ride share back? That means you're paying double. I think with the impairment of already being drunk they just decide to chance it probably deal with that back and forth hea

    • Re: odds... That depends entirely on enforcement priorities of police.

      And unless you're s total moron, you take the uber TO the bar/party.

  • by Ed Tice ( 3732157 ) on Saturday July 30, 2016 @11:52AM (#52612151)
    An easier way to disprove this marketing claim is that Uber and Lyft won't actually accept riders who are too drunk to drive. Most Uber drivers I've talked to stop working around the time the bars let out because they don't want the drunks. If they do get a drunk passenger, they give that passenger a low rating and the person gets banned from the app. Given that they actively avoid taking people who've been drinking, there's no point of further examining the claim that they reduce drunk driving!
    • Horse shit. There's a huge difference between slobbering hammered and simply having had enough to drink that you'd get arrested due to the draconian MADD sponsored alcohol laws. When I still drove, I used Uber all the time when drinking. I probably COULD have gotten away with driving in those situations, but I'd prefer not to risk my freedom.

      Now I live and work downtown and walk everywhere. I still use Uber to get places outside walking distance, but sometimes I'll use it to get home if I don't think I'm sa

    • Why do you come here just to make shit up? Is it a game to see who believes you?

      Uber drivers are heavily influenced by surge pricing, which would cause people to decide to deal with drinks to get 3x normal fare if what you say were true. But the worst surge ratio I have seen here in Austin as the bars are closing is 1.8x, and it's usually 1.2x. That means there is enough supply to service almost everyone who wants in uber in whatever timeframe uber sets as its service level goal.

  • If alcohol doesn't increase the rate of accidents, for example because tipsy drivers drive more carefully to avoid being pulled over, then these statistics mean nothing.

    If people's motivation for driving home drunk instead of getting a cab, uber or lyft is because their car is parked in limited time parking where it would be subject to fines and/or towing when left overnight, then the availability of cabs is moot.

    Statistics isn't hard if you do it right. Observational studies of rare events are highly likel

  • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Saturday July 30, 2016 @12:23PM (#52612271)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • You're right that it isn't ride sharing, but not for the reason you say. It's ride sharing if you charge the person no more than the IRS mileage reimbursement rate.

    • maybe billions shoving it down our throats before we realized what they were doing. It's the same reason you buy your wife a diamond ring.
  • I for one am glad that Uber at least found a new study after discovering that it doesn't decrease drunk driving.
  • by ronmon ( 95471 ) on Saturday July 30, 2016 @05:12PM (#52613779)

    Why do people call it that? It is merely an app-driven unlicensed taxi service.

    • Why do people call it that? It is merely an app-driven unlicensed taxi service.

      Well, in most places to call yourself a taxi service you need a license. And most people don't do taxi-service in their spare time like many Uber drivers do.

      "Ride-sharing" isn't quite right, but it's probably called that for political reasons.

  • In an effort to extract more money from its drivers, the Uber cab company has been pushing them to use Uberpool [cnn.com] where riders traveling to similar destinations are grouped together in the same vehicle.

    This sounds great in theory, the Uber cab driver can carry more riders, but the downsides are several. First, the cab driver has to go out of their way to pick up the second (or third) rider, this leads to the second issue where the rider "experience" is degraded because the other riders might be undesirab
  • There is a level of false confidence driver have to recognize to go "okay, I shouldn't drive." I started using Uber and it only costs about $7 without surge to get home. I had a few drinks the other night and I Uber'd home, picked up my car the next day. I get caught over the limit, I lose my job (company car) and perhaps my career (licensed medical personnel). I'm just one guy and there were a -lot- of people at that pub.

    One thing to consider: how many drunk drivers actually get caught? Go to a averag

  • Seriously, AP will likely make a HUGE dent in drunken driving. By 2020, it will be apparent that owners of AP cars, such as Tesla, no longer get into accidents, including when drinking.
  • If you're pissed, why not just take the bus home. Or walk.

    Or have sme countries so distorted their city plans so that a car is an absolute necessity (like air and water - and food in alternating months) instead of a luxury. What weird priorities.

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