Current:Home > ScamsNew York City mandates $18 minimum wage for food delivery workers -WealthRoots Academy
New York City mandates $18 minimum wage for food delivery workers
View
Date:2025-04-16 23:07:01
Starting in July, food delivery workers in New York City will make nearly $18 an hour, as New York becomes the nation's first city to mandate a minimum wage for the app-based restaurant employees.
Delivery apps would be required to pay their workers a minimum of $17.96 per hour plus tips by July 12, rising to $19.96 per hour by 2025. After that, the pay will be indexed to inflation.
It's a significant increase from delivery workers' current pay of about $12 an hour, as calculated by the city's Department of Consumer and Worker Protection (DCWP).
"Today marks a historic moment in our city's history. New York City's more than 60,000 app delivery workers, who are essential to our city, will soon be guaranteed a minimum pay," Ligia Guallpa, executive director of the Workers' Justice Project, said at a press conference announcing the change.
How exactly apps decide to base their workers' wages is up to them, as long as they reach the minimum pay.
"Apps have the option to pay delivery workers per trip, per hour worked, or develop their own formulas, as long as their workers make the minimum pay rate of $19.96, on average," the mayor's office said, explaining the new rules.
Apps that only pay per trip must pay approximately 50 cents per minute of trip time; apps that pay delivery workers for the entire time they're logged in, including when they are waiting for an order, must pay approximately 30 cents per minute.
New York City's minimum wage is $15. The new law sets app workers' pay higher to account for the fact that apps classify delivery workers as independent contractors, who pay higher taxes than regular employees and have other work-related expenses.
The law represents a compromise between worker advocates, who had suggested a minimum of about $24 per hour, and delivery companies, which had pushed to exclude canceled trips from pay and create a lower calculation for time spent on the apps.
Backlash from food apps
Apps pushed back against the minimum pay law, with Grubhub saying it was "disappointed in the DCWP's final rule, which will have serious adverse consequences for delivery workers in New York City."
"The city isn't being honest with delivery workers — they want apps to fund the new wage by quote — 'increasing efficiency.' 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," Uber spokesperson Josh Gold told CBS News.
DoorDash called the new pay rule "deeply misguided" and said it was considering legal action.
"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," the company said.
In 2019, New York set minimum pay laws for Uber and Lyft drivers.
Seattle's city council last year passed legislation requiring app workers to be paid at least the city's minimum wage.
- In:
- Minimum Wage
veryGood! (1)
Related
- 'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
- Financial executive convicted of insider trading in case over acquisition of Trump’s media company
- New Jersey legislators advance bill overhauling state’s open records law
- Pennsylvania to ban cell phone use while driving and require police to collect traffic stop data
- Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
- Hunter Biden's bid to toss gun charges rejected by U.S. appeals court
- Disney and Warner Bros. are bundling their streaming platforms
- The Purrfect Way Kate Bosworth Relationship Has Influenced Justin Long
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- Looking for Unbeatable Home Deals? Run To Pottery Barn’s Sale, Where You’ll Score up to 60% Off
Ranking
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- US utility pledges more transparency after lack of notice it empowered CEO to make plant decisions
- Limit these ultra-processed foods for longer-term health, 30-year study suggests
- 1 lawmaker stops South Carolina health care consolidation bill that had overwhelming support
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Ai Profit Algorithms 4.0 - Changing the Game Rules of the Investment Industry Completely
- After Weinstein’s case was overturned, New York lawmakers move to strengthen sex crime prosecutions
- Police in North Carolina shoot woman who opened fire in Walmart parking lot after wreck
Recommendation
The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
Neuralink brain-chip implant encounters issues in first human patient
MLB Misery Index: Cardinals' former MVP enduring an incredibly ugly stretch
Why am I lonely? Lack of social connections hurts Americans' mental health.
Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
Maine lawmakers to take up 80 spending proposals in addition to vetoes
Bachelor Nation's Victoria Fuller Breaks Silence on Greg Grippo Breakup
2024 South Carolina General Assembly session may be remembered for what didn’t happen