Ordering food on an app is easy. Delivering it could mean injury and theft

Ordering food on an app is easy. Delivering it could mean injury and theft

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Gustavo Ajche is about to begin his shift in Lower Manhattan. He makes sure his e-bike is powered up and his iPhone mounted to his handlebars, then nods approvingly. "Now we're


gonna connect it to the app," he said. "I'm gonna start working." Ajche's story is familiar among the thousands of bike-propelled delivery workers that have


overtaken New York City since the pandemic: An immigrant from Guatemala and father of two, he was laid off from his pizza delivery job during the pandemic, so he switched to delivering food


for apps like DoorDash and GrubHub. That meant, he said, swapping a human boss for something else. "Patron Fantasma," said Ajche, who is 38. "It's like a ghost


boss." The food delivery apps, which also include UberEats, position themselves as a "frictionless" way to order food with a few taps of a phone. But there's plenty of


friction for the delivery workers cycling through New York at a breakneck pace, whether weaving around traffic at high speeds, wiping out on a bike, or sometimes even fending off attackers.


Meanwhile, the food delivery apps monitor their every move, pressuring them to go faster and faster to hungry customers awaiting orders from the comfort of their homes. All to earn a few


hundred dollars a day, if they're lucky. "When the customer sees their bill from GrubHub or DoorDash, they see different fees and cost of the item, and tip, but what's not


listed on the bill is the human toll on the workers," said Do Jun Lee, an urban studies professor at Queens College who has extensively studied the city's delivery workers.


"What they have to pay out of pocket. The robberies and assaults they experience. The broken leg they got while delivering." HALF OF WORKERS REPORT HAVING THEIR E-BIKES STOLEN With


many people sticking to habits formed when the pandemic kept them inside, customers orders on the delivery apps keep flowing in and competition among the companies, and among the workers,


is fierce. Speed, it turns out, is a premium. "Before the pandemic I used a regular bike," Ajche said. "But now, you need an Arrow or you won't be able to work." The


Arrow is a battery-powered mountain bike that can go up to 30 mph. It usually cost around $1,800 and has become the standard mode of transportation of choice among the estimated 65,000 food


delivery workers racing around the city. "I like to compare it to an extreme sport," he said. "You keep going and going and keep pushing and pushing until you can't push


anymore." Before COVID-19 hit, the city fined workers and impounded their e-bikes, citing how dangerous they can be, but the the pandemic turned them from perceived scourge to


essential infrastructure. That was welcome news to Ajche, but it was accompanied by something troubling: an uptick in bike robberies and assaults of delivery workers. A recent survey of 500


delivery workers conducted by the Worker's Justice Project and Cornell University found that more than half have had an accident or crash while doing a delivery. Three in four delivery


workers said they paid for medical care from a work-related injury out of their own pocket. Half said they have had their bikes stolen. Now, during late night shifts, delivery workers cross


bridges in large packs to ward off would-be thieves, Ajche said. In the first nine months of 2021, ten delivery cyclists have died, according to the Worker's Justice Project. That


includes one who died after a hit and run in Brooklyn and another worker who was stabbed to death. "You never know who's going to confront you. You never know who is going to try


to steal your bike. Maybe somebody with a gun," Ajche said. The rise in robberies and injuries led Ajache to help form a group called Los Deliveristas Unidos, vaulting Ajche from


part-time construction worker and DoorDasher, as some call themselves, to the public face of an organized movement to unify delivery workers around the common cause of better protections and


safety. NEW PROTECTIONS FROM THE CITY AND COMPANIES FALL SHORT OF WORKERS' NEEDS The group successfully lobbied the New York City Council to set new pay minimums and require


restaurants to let workers use their bathrooms, which was previously not allowed. "OK, this is good," Ajache said of the new protections. "But what about security? Security


was the main problem on the street." Ajche wants better lighting installed on dark bridges and he wants the NYPD to take crimes against delivery workers more seriously. He thinks there


should be a law to penalize perpetrators of crimes against app couriers. Last year, Ajche fell after his bike wiped out on black ice and badly injured his knees. He notified the tech


companies. "If you need assistance, we can call 911. But that's the best we can do for you. That's what they say to you," he recalled. That made him sad, he said,


"because you're working for them." In response to these growing safety concerns, DoorDash on Wednesday announced a new tool on the app called SafeDash in six cities including


New York, in partnership with security company ADT. The app offers "reassurance calls" if a DoorDasher feels unsafe and an easy way to contact 911 if a worker encounters danger.


The company told NPR if a worker suffers an injury while delivering for the company, they may be eligible for accident insurance. But the protections do not cover damage to bicycles and may


not apply if a courier is delivering food for multiple apps, which many do. A PLEA TO PEOPLE ORDERING FOOD: HAVE EMPATHY Ajche says his message to people ordering food through the apps is


this: Workers are often pulling 12, 13, 14 hour shifts for maybe $200 or $300 a night. They are moving, he said, as fast as they can. "They're calling you, they're texting


you, 'where is my food'?" Ajche said. "And then sometimes it isn't the delivery worker's problem that the food is getting to you cold," he said. "If


customers realized how many orders we have in our bag at once, maybe they'd understand what we're going through." Copyright 2023 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.