(NYC) App food delivery workers pay to be increased from $7 to $17.96

SNYC

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Are you still tipping? :lolbron:


New York City on Sunday announced a new minimum pay-rate for app food delivery workers amid a rise in use of services like Uber Eats and DoorDash since the pandemic.

Manhattan’s 60,000 food delivery workers currently make on average about $7.09 an hour, according to a news release from the city, explaining the new pay-rate will allow them to eventually earn at least $19.96 an hour. The pay will increase to $17.96 an hour on July 12 then increase again to nearly $20 an hour in April 2025.

Pay will be adjusted annually for inflation, the city added.

The city says delivery apps will have flexibility in how they pay delivery workers the new minimum rate. As long as workers make the minimum amount, apps can choose to pay them per trip, per hour worked or through their own formula.

“Our delivery workers have consistently delivered for us — now, we are delivering for them,” New York City Mayor Eric Adams said in a statement. “This new minimum pay rate, up by almost $13.00/hour, will guarantee these workers and their families can earn a living, access greater economic stability, and help keep our city’s legendary restaurant industry thriving.”

Apps that pay workers for the time they are waiting for a trip and their trip time must pay at least $0.30 a minute once the changes start in 2023. Apps that only pay once a driver accepts a delivery trip will have to pay at least $0.50 a minute, the release said. The rates do not include tips.

“While there’s still work to do, a minimum pay rate for food delivery workers will transform the lives of thousands of families across the city and deliver long overdue justice for deliveristas,” Ligia Guallpa, executive director of the Worker’s Justice Project, said in a statement. The group works to advocate for delivery workers in the city.

However, DoorDash said in a statement Sunday that it is considering litigation to push back against the city’s “extreme policy,” saying it goes beyond the standards other industries are held to – though it’s not opposed to a minimum wage for delivery workers.

“Today’s deeply misguided decision by the DCWP ignores the unintended consequences it will cause and sadly will undermine the very delivery workers it seeks to support,” a spokesperson for the company said. “Given the broken process that resulted in such an extreme final minimum pay rule, we will continue to explore all paths forward — including litigation — to ensure we continue to best support Dashers and protect the flexibility that so many delivery workers like them depend on.”

Uber Eats said the city is not “being honest with delivery workers” in a statement Sunday. Uber also owns Postmates.

“They are telling apps: eliminate jobs, discourage tipping, force couriers to go faster and accept more trips - that’s how you’ll pay for this,” Josh Gold, a spokesperson for Uber Eats said in a statement.

Delivery orders spiked during the pandemic. In 2019, delivery accounted for about 7% of total US restaurant sales, according to Euromonitor International. After a spike in 2020, it settled at nearly 9% in 2021, still higher than pre-Covid levels.

New York City struggled handling the rise of online ordering and managing the tens of thousands of workers who make it happen. The lack of infrastructure for food delivery created problems for workers, pedestrians and residents, leading lawmakers to encourage more bike lanes, new rules around bathroom access and an ongoing campaign to combat the risk of lithium-ion fires in electric bikes and scooters, CNN reported.

Delivery workers also struggled to find spaces when it rained or access to restrooms.

“People view delivery workers as dirty, smelly and taking up too much space,” said Joshua Wood, a member of Workers Justice Project told CNN in May. “They want us to be this invisible army that gets what they need done. They don’t want to pay attention to how the sausage gets made.”

Local Law 115, passed in 2021, required the Department of Consumer and Worker Protection to study delivery worker pay and treatment. The Adams administration said it is working with Los Deliveristas Unidos to convert vacant newsstands into shelters for delivery workers, as well as to charge electric bicycles and phones.




I'm Pot & Pan Gang, so this doesn't effect me. But good for them 🚴🏽‍♀️
 

King Sun

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TBH I don't want nobody barely enough to feed themselves delivery my food and why wouldn't you still tip that's still not enough for someone to live solo in NY :mjlol:
 

Sir Richard Spirit

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I don’t feel bad for anyone ordering or working there. The business itself takes advantage of workers and users and we all know it upfront.
:dahell: @ the drivers or bike riders who think I’m suppose to tip them for almost cold food.
 

bnew

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Uber, Grubhub and DoorDash must pay NYC delivery workers an $18 minimum wage​

A first-of-its kind law requiring a minimum wage for app-based delivery workers will take effect after a judge rejected the companies' bid to block it.​

Cheyenne MacDonald
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Weekend Editor

Thu, Sep 28, 2023, 5:31 PM EDT·1 min read

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STRF/STAR MAX/IPx

Uber, DoorDash and Grubhub won’t be able to get out of paying minimum wage to their New York City delivery workers after all, following a judge’s decision to reject their bid to skirt the city’s new law. The upcoming law, which is still pending due to the companies’ ongoing lawsuit, aims to secure better wage protections for app-based workers. Once the suit settles, third-party delivery providers will have to pay delivery workers a minimum wage of roughly $18 per hour before tips, and keep up with the yearly increases, Reuters reports.

The amount, which will increase April 1 of every year, is slightly higher than the city’s standard minimum wage, taking into account the additional expenses gig workers face. At the moment, food delivery workers make an estimated $7-$11 per hour on average.


New York Acting Supreme Court Justice Nicholas Moyne put the law on pause back in July, when the three companies and the smaller delivery service, Relay Delivery, sued the city, arguing that the raised rates will have a negative impact on their services. With Moyne's latest decision, it’ll now move forward. While Uber, DoorDash and Grubhub will have to comply once it takes effect, Relay will be given more time to renegotiate its contracts with restaurants, according to Reuters.

The move makes NYC the first US city to require a minimum wage for app-based deliveries, and others are likely to follow suit. The city previously pushed ride hailing apps to raise their minimum rates for drivers, forcing Uber and Lyft to raise their per-mile rates by just over 5 percent in 2022.
 

feelosofer

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I don't live in NYC but I go to meetings out there every once in a while and use Doordash. I'm sure the prices will go up but it's a hard job and it means a few brehs out there can make an easier living out there I can live with it.
 

Grand Cru Boo

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I don’t use them often (once a quarter of that) so my opinion has little merit, but I hope this means

Better service
Better estimates
Less “can you come downstairs, I’m at the front door”

And all the other bs that comes with it
 

Thavoiceofthevoiceless

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I don’t use them often (once a quarter of that) so my opinion has little merit, but I hope this means

Better service
Better estimates
Less “can you come downstairs, I’m at the front door”

And all the other bs that comes with it
A DoorDash driver tried that with me a few days ago as they didn’t follow the instructions I left on the order.

I could tell he was pissed when I told him to get back in his car and go through the gate to drop it off as I wasn’t coming out to get it, but :yeshrug:
 

Grand Cru Boo

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A DoorDash driver tried that with me a few days ago as they didn’t follow the instructions I left on the order.

I could tell he was pissed when I told him to get back in his car and go through the gate to drop it off as I wasn’t coming out to get it, but :yeshrug:
You pay for the service… do your job.

I use to live on the 10th floor and they would be like… “can you come down, I can’t get in the door”

Nah B, I tipped, pull up or I’m complaining. Plain and simple
 
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