by Jennifer Chowdhury
This story was originally published at Prism.
On Sept. 23, the New York City Council passed a historic set of bills establishing safety and security for delivery workers, particularly those working for food delivery apps. The legislation, which was sent to Mayor Bill de Blasio’s desk and is expected to be signed into law, allows workers to access restaurant bathrooms, sets minimum wages per delivery, limits distances that workers can travel, and requires apps to establish fair tipping policies. It is the first legislation to address the rights of delivery workers across the nation.
“This sets a new framework for new rights for delivery workers that people in other industries take for granted: something as simple as being able to use the restroom,” said Hildalyn Colon-Hernandez, director of policy and strategic partnerships at the Workers Justice Project (WJP), a New York City center for low-wage immigrant workers that educates, organizes, and fights for better conditions in the workplace.
With WJP’s support over the past nine months, app-based delivery workers have been organizing as Los Deliveristas Unidos (LDU). Los Deliveristas Unidos represents 65,000 delivery workers in New York City. Many food workers lost their jobs when the restaurants that employed them were forced to close due to the COVID-19 pandemic. They signed up with delivery apps such as Grubhub, DoorDash, Relay, and UberEats to earn an income.
“Despite being recognized as essential workers, they have been denied basic workers’ rights and are continuously treated as disposable labor,” said Ligia Guallpa, executive director of the Worker’s Justice Project, in a statement to the press. “In an effort to defend their humanity and dignity, WJP members formed Los Deliveristas Unidos, a powerful grassroots movement of app-based food delivery workers to win today’s historic legislative protections that will give them more control over their labor and livelihood.”
In early September, LDU and WJP released a joint report on the working and living conditions of New York City app-delivery workers by surveying 500 app-based couriers doing deliveries in the city, arranging focus groups of workers, and conducting individual interviews. The report found that delivery workers routinely face assault, abuse, wage theft, bike theft, withholding of tips, denial of bathroom access, unjustified deactivation of their app accounts, and even death in the streets, resulting from traffic accidents and violent bike robberies. Workers risked their lives every day during the pandemic to deliver food without protection. Things were further exacerbated during Hurricane Ida when apps such as Grubhub, DoorDash, and Relay refused to pause service and incentivized workers to make deliveries during life-threatening conditions.
WJP and LDU partnered with city council members to introduce the LDU bill package: NYC Deliver Justice to Los Deliveristas. The movement caught the city council’s attention in April when over 2,000 delivery workers protested for better working conditions in Times Square.
“The workers came up with solutions and suggestions on how to tackle the problems they were facing. This was included in the legislation,” explained Hildalyn Colon-Hernandez.
But LDU and WJP’s work isn’t done yet. According to Colon-Hernandez, LDU will be continuing its fight for better working conditions by concentrating on safety. Delivery workers are routinely victims of assault and theft, and she says NYPD has been lax with investigating these issues seriously and holding people accountable.
“I just received a phone call from one of our workers’ wives. He was hit by a car on Sunday and died leaving three children behind. Who will take care of them now?” said Hildalyn Colon-Hernandez.
At the beginning of the report, the names of 17 delivery workers who lost their lives on the job are listed in commemoration. App-based couriers still face dangerous working conditions and lack access to medical coverage, workers’ compensation in case of injuries on the job, and workplace health and safety regulations, since they are classified as independent contractors.
“Some of the delivery companies have covered medical costs in the past, but it’s very minimal,” Colon-Hernandez said. “We [WJP] have legal teams working on this, but what about workers who don’t have these resources?”
Jennifer Chowdhury is a journalist and writer dedicated to human rights reporting with a special focus on women of color around the world whose voices are stifled by patriarchy, systematic racism, and socioeconomic burdens. She spent two years reporting on the Rohingya refugee crisis in Bangladesh and a lifetime of witnessing immigrant communities in New York City. Her work has been featured in The Washington Post, NPR, The Guardian, The New York Times, Elle magazine, and more.
Prism is a BIPOC-led non-profit news outlet that centers the people, places, and issues currently underreported by national media. We’re committed to producing the kind of journalism that treats Black, Indigenous, and people of color, women, the LGBTQ+ community, and other invisibilized groups as the experts on our own lived experiences, our resilience, and our fights for justice. Sign up for our email list to get our stories in your inbox, and follow us on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram.
This story was originally published at Prism.
On Sept. 23, the New York City Council passed a historic set of bills establishing safety and security for delivery workers, particularly those working for food delivery apps. The legislation, which was sent to Mayor Bill de Blasio’s desk and is expected to be signed into law, allows workers to access restaurant bathrooms, sets minimum wages per delivery, limits distances that workers can travel, and requires apps to establish fair tipping policies. It is the first legislation to address the rights of delivery workers across the nation.
“This sets a new framework for new rights for delivery workers that people in other industries take for granted: something as simple as being able to use the restroom,” said Hildalyn Colon-Hernandez, director of policy and strategic partnerships at the Workers Justice Project (WJP), a New York City center for low-wage immigrant workers that educates, organizes, and fights for better conditions in the workplace.
With WJP’s support over the past nine months, app-based delivery workers have been organizing as Los Deliveristas Unidos (LDU). Los Deliveristas Unidos represents 65,000 delivery workers in New York City. Many food workers lost their jobs when the restaurants that employed them were forced to close due to the COVID-19 pandemic. They signed up with delivery apps such as Grubhub, DoorDash, Relay, and UberEats to earn an income.
“Despite being recognized as essential workers, they have been denied basic workers’ rights and are continuously treated as disposable labor,” said Ligia Guallpa, executive director of the Worker’s Justice Project, in a statement to the press. “In an effort to defend their humanity and dignity, WJP members formed Los Deliveristas Unidos, a powerful grassroots movement of app-based food delivery workers to win today’s historic legislative protections that will give them more control over their labor and livelihood.”
In early September, LDU and WJP released a joint report on the working and living conditions of New York City app-delivery workers by surveying 500 app-based couriers doing deliveries in the city, arranging focus groups of workers, and conducting individual interviews. The report found that delivery workers routinely face assault, abuse, wage theft, bike theft, withholding of tips, denial of bathroom access, unjustified deactivation of their app accounts, and even death in the streets, resulting from traffic accidents and violent bike robberies. Workers risked their lives every day during the pandemic to deliver food without protection. Things were further exacerbated during Hurricane Ida when apps such as Grubhub, DoorDash, and Relay refused to pause service and incentivized workers to make deliveries during life-threatening conditions.
WJP and LDU partnered with city council members to introduce the LDU bill package: NYC Deliver Justice to Los Deliveristas. The movement caught the city council’s attention in April when over 2,000 delivery workers protested for better working conditions in Times Square.
“The workers came up with solutions and suggestions on how to tackle the problems they were facing. This was included in the legislation,” explained Hildalyn Colon-Hernandez.
But LDU and WJP’s work isn’t done yet. According to Colon-Hernandez, LDU will be continuing its fight for better working conditions by concentrating on safety. Delivery workers are routinely victims of assault and theft, and she says NYPD has been lax with investigating these issues seriously and holding people accountable.
“I just received a phone call from one of our workers’ wives. He was hit by a car on Sunday and died leaving three children behind. Who will take care of them now?” said Hildalyn Colon-Hernandez.
At the beginning of the report, the names of 17 delivery workers who lost their lives on the job are listed in commemoration. App-based couriers still face dangerous working conditions and lack access to medical coverage, workers’ compensation in case of injuries on the job, and workplace health and safety regulations, since they are classified as independent contractors.
“Some of the delivery companies have covered medical costs in the past, but it’s very minimal,” Colon-Hernandez said. “We [WJP] have legal teams working on this, but what about workers who don’t have these resources?”
Jennifer Chowdhury is a journalist and writer dedicated to human rights reporting with a special focus on women of color around the world whose voices are stifled by patriarchy, systematic racism, and socioeconomic burdens. She spent two years reporting on the Rohingya refugee crisis in Bangladesh and a lifetime of witnessing immigrant communities in New York City. Her work has been featured in The Washington Post, NPR, The Guardian, The New York Times, Elle magazine, and more.
Prism is a BIPOC-led non-profit news outlet that centers the people, places, and issues currently underreported by national media. We’re committed to producing the kind of journalism that treats Black, Indigenous, and people of color, women, the LGBTQ+ community, and other invisibilized groups as the experts on our own lived experiences, our resilience, and our fights for justice. Sign up for our email list to get our stories in your inbox, and follow us on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram.