Technology

In this article

Air travelers walk toward a Lyft pickup area at Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) on August 20, 2020 in Los Angeles, California.
Mario Tama | Getty Images

Lyft said Friday it would cover legal fees for drivers on its platform who are sued under Texas’ restrictive abortion law that went into effect this week.

The law bans most abortions after six weeks of pregnancy, a time period before many women have even discovered they’re pregnant.

Patients may not be sued, but people aiding the procedure, including doctors, people paying for the procedure and clinic workers are at risk. That includes rideshare drivers who can be punished for transporting women to clinics to receive abortions, where they could be fined $10,000.

“Drivers are never responsible for monitoring where their riders go or why. Imagine being a driver and not knowing if you are breaking the law by giving someone a ride,” the company said in a release. “Similarly, riders never have to justify, or even share, where they are going and why. Imagine being a pregnant woman trying to get to a healthcare appointment and not knowing if your driver will cancel on you for fear of breaking a law. Both are completely unacceptable.”

It’s the first rideshare company to speak out on the issue. Uber, Lyft’s main competitor, did not respond to CNBC’s requests for comment this week.

“This is an attack on women’s access to healthcare and on their right to choose,” Lyft CEO Logan Green said in a tweet Friday. Abortion rights activists and providers argue the law effectively overturns protections set under Roe v. Wade in 1973.

Lyft said its defense fund would cover 100% of legal fees incurred by drivers because of the law. The company will also donate $1 million to Planned Parenthood.

“TX SB8 threatens to punish drivers for getting people where they need to go— especially women exercising their right to choose,” Green said in the tweet.

Corporations have been relatively silent so far on the matter. Texas-based dating companies Bumble and Match‘s CEO Shar Dubey responded to the measure Thursday, each announcing relief funds.

“Surely everyone should see the danger of this highly punitive and unfair law that doesn’t even make an exception for victims of rape or incest. I would hate for our state to take this big step back in women’s rights,” Dubey wrote in a memo to employees this week.

Subscribe to CNBC on YouTube.

Articles You May Like

Private prison stocks jump on Trump appointment of immigration hardliner Tom Homan
Voyager 2’s Historic Flyby of Uranus Exposes Rare Magnetic Distortion
Porsche launches three new Taycan EV models, adding more performance and range
Who is the PM’s new national security adviser?
Post Office to set out plans for branch closures and job cuts