Dayton Daily News

Former Uber CEO Kalanick severs ties

Kalanick quits board, recently sold more than $2.5 billion in stock.

- By Cathy Bussewitz

— Former Uber CEO Travis Kalanick is resigning from the board of directors, severing ties to the ride-hailing company that he co-founded a decade ago and ran until a series of scandals led to his downfall.

The departure, announced Tuesday, did not come as a surprise. Kalanick recently sold more than $2.5 billion worth of stock in the company, or more than 90% of his holdings.

“Uber has been a part of my life for the past 10 years. At the close of the decade, and with the company now public, it seems like the right moment for me to focus on my current business and philanthro­pic pursuits,” the 43-year-old entreprene­ur said in a statement.

Uber, based in San Francisco, turbocharg­ed the gig economy, and its drivers have logged 15 billion trips since 2010. But Kalanick was ousted as CEO in the summer of 2017 with the company mired in lawsuits.

Uber under Kalanick grew with incredible speed, but like a number of other tech startups, it ran into trouble with a corporate “bro” culture that appeared at times to be spinning out of control. It was a problem Kalanick acknowledg­ed. Before his ouster as CEO, he said he needed to “fundamenta­lly change and grow up.”

His career at Uber seemed to fit a certain pattern seen in Silicon Valley: The brash and disruptive personalit­ies who are great at creating startups can be ill-suited for the corner office when the company reaches maturity. Sometimes “adult supervisio­n” in the form of experience­d executives has to be brought in.

In one of the Uber’s biggest scandals, Kalanick was accused of presiding over a workplace culture that allowed rampant sexual harassment.

A former Uber engineer, Susan Fowler, leveled sexual harassment and sexism allegation­s in a 2017 blog post, saying a boss — not Kalanick — had propositio­ned her and higher-ups had ignored her complaints. Kalanick called the accusation­s “abhorrent” and hired former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder to investigat­e. Holder recommende­d reducing Kalanick’s responsibi­lities.

After multiple investigat­ions, Uber fired 20 employees accused of sexual harassment, bullying and retaliatio­n against those who complained. This month, the company paid $4.4 million to settle a federal investigat­ion over workplace misconduct.

The problems went beyond employee relations.

Waymo, the self-driving car company spun off from Google, sued Uber in 2017, alleging a top manager at Google stole pivotal technology from the company before leaving to run Uber’s self-driving car division.

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