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It's 2026, im in my..*doesnt like putting my age anymore* I'm old.. and im having work stress dreams about fucking Uber🤦♂️ I dont even do taxi service, which I figured would be far more stressful than driving around food and the occasional ~Mysterious Packige~ but I guess I've fucked up just enough (or had shitty things happen that were beyond my control) (both are true) to subconsciously fear it🙃
Anyway ive been waking up utterly CONVINCED I have someones fuckin.. undelivered hoagie or whatever.. sitting in my car, or i switched up two orders and thats why my phone is making noise (not really how that works) or I dropped ~Mysterious Packige~ in mud puddle and now I owe the cartel ✋️😬 that last one is a JOKE tho doing package delivery does yield some rather shady adventures, like what could possibly be in this wadded up piece of tinfoil im being paid to drive across the city other than drugs - i honestly dont really mind, bc im definitely not saying it's mine if I get pulled over and a cop somehow roots thru my car (he won't) enough to find it among my other deliveries. Considering my background, might as well be me lol
Anyway i havent had work stress dreams ever since i stopped working as a line cook. So like.. it's been at least eight years smh
fat tumblr freddy please follow me now, I need money to DoorDash Dominos anmd I will draw comissions
i have some photgraphy i will sell to you
Spring Things Philadelphia April2026
i can’t wait until they’re sued into dust, because what the fuck is this!???????
Higher pay is on the horizon for the app-based workers who zip around the city.
Across New York City, delivery drivers are a ubiquitous sight: congregating outside big restaurant chains waiting to collect orders, zooming through the city streets with orders in tow. “The most chaotic time for deliveries is easily during lunch time,” says Elijah Williams, who delivers food for both Uber and DoorDash. “I’ve had up to four orders at one time.”
Mayor Eric Adams recently announced a major change that will deeply impact busy workers like Williams: app-based delivery workers will be paid $17.96 an hour starting July 12th — and nearly $20 an hour by 2025 — marking the nation’s first minimum pay for such workers.
“Our delivery workers have consistently delivered for us — now, we are delivering for them,” he said. “They should not be delivering food to your household, if they can’t put food on the plate in their household.”
The Background
Mayor Adams made the announcement at City Hall, surrounded by delivery workers as well as members of the nonprofit organizations, Workers Justice Project (WJP) and Los Deliveristas Unidos.
Ligia Guallpa, executive director of WJP, expressed her excitement and gratitude.
“This first of its kind minimum pay rate will uplift working and immigrant families,” said [Ligia Guallpa of Workers Justice Project (WJP)] alongside Gustavo Ajche of Los Deliveristas Unidos. “[It will] ensure that workers who keep New Yorkers fed, are able to keep also their families fed too.”
WJP was founded in 2010, and coordinates numerous worker-led programs, including Los Deliveristas Unidos, that aim to improve conditions for low-wage immigrant workers across the five boroughs.
The Details
The current minimum wage in New York is $15 an hour. On average, service workers are paid $7.09 an hour, excluding tips. The new wage is in keeping with a law passed by the City Council in 2021, which requires the Department of Consumer and Worker Protection to set a standard minimum rate for delivery workers.
App-based delivery workers are classified as “independent contractors,” which means they’re not entitled to the standard minimum wage that applies to salaried employees’ pay. Instead, delivery workers who work for the big food delivery services, like Uber Eats and Relay, are entitled to just $2.13 an hour before tips — a so-called “tipped sub-minimum wage.”
Research has shown that getting rid of tipped sub-minimum wages benefits not just the workers getting the raise, but the economy as a whole. A 2021 analysis found that states without a tipped sub-minimum wage saw 29 percent growth in their leisure and hospitality sectors, compared to just six percent in states that used the federal tipped sub-minimum wage of $2.13.
...For many of the workers who face hostile roads and unpredictable weather conditions to get New Yorkers their ordered goods, this is a life-changing development.
“This is my full-time job. I get up every day and do this,” says delivery driver Justin Martinez outside the Chick-Fil-A in Washington Heights.
Martinez, 30, is originally from the Dominican Republic. His commitment to completing deliveries, he explains, is fueled by his love for his family.
“This is my way to contribute. I go out, 9, 10 hours a day, do deliveries, and then I can come home,” he says. Martinez first started driving for Uber in 2019 before transitioning to delivering food for Uber Eats and other apps in 2021. He’s excited for the pay wage increase: “Maybe now, I only [have to] go out for 6 hours.”
-via Reasons to Be Cheerful, June 30, 2023