Seattle's new mandatory $5 fee on delivery apps, aimed at covering driver's living wage, has led to a significant drop in sales for companies like DoorDash, Uber Eats, Instacart, and Grubhub. This has resulted in lower earnings for drivers, making it difficult for them to pay their bills. The fee was intended to provide a more livable wage for drivers but has backfired, causing a decrease in orders and tips, ultimately impacting the drivers' financial well-being.
Customers and food and grocery delivery drivers are feeling the pinch that has reportedly followed Seattle’s newly enacted minimum pay law for app-based workers, affecting companies like DoorDash, Uber Eats, Instacart, and Grubhub: https://t.co/vH2SGV2ewM
Customers and food and grocery delivery drivers are feeling the pinch that has reportedly followed Seattle’s newly-enacted minimum pay law for app-based workers, affecting companies like DoorDash, Uber Eats, Instacart, and Grubhub. https://t.co/vH2SGV2ewM
PROGRESSIVISM: Seattle's "living wage" fee meant to help delivery drivers is causing drivers to make less because people stopped placing orders https://t.co/zXRRf7BXyf https://t.co/zXRRf7BXyf
Seattle introduced a mandatory $5 fee on delivery apps to cover their driver’s living wage and sales were almost cut in half. Now drivers are having trouble paying their bills. Centralized economic planning strikes again! https://t.co/eHuJdbQP32
$DASH $UBER new Seattle City ordinance designed to give food delivery app drivers a more livable wage is "backfiring," according to several drivers. Because people are not ordering as much anymore. The tips are going down because they think we're making all this money
Seattle introduced a mandatory $5 fee on delivery apps to cover their driver’s living wage and sales were almost cut in half. Now the drivers can’t make rent. https://t.co/gOZmX1vvwX