Chattanooga Times Free Press

Thousands of delivery, ride-hailing drivers in US and UK stop work on Valentine’s Day

- BY DEE-ANN DURBIN

Thousands of ridehailin­g and delivery workers in the U.S. and the U.K. went on strike on Valentine’s Day, calling for higher pay and other changes to their working conditions.

In the U.S., Uber and Lyft drivers planned daylong strikes in Chicago; Philadelph­ia; Pittsburgh; Miami; Orlando and Tampa, Florida; Hartford, Connecticu­t; Newark, New Jersey; Austin, Texas; and Providence, Rhode Island. Drivers also held midday demonstrat­ions at airports in those cities, according to Justice for App Workers, the group organizing the effort.

Meanwhile, U.K. delivery drivers for Uber Eats, Deliveroo, Just Eat and Stuart said they would turn off their apps and refuse deliveries between 5 p.m. and 10 p.m. The group Delivery Job U.K., which called for the walkout, said on Instagram that the strike was “a crucial opportunit­y to be seen and heard by society.”

Of eight delivery drivers who spoke with The Associated Press on the streets of London on Wednesday, all but one said they planned to halt work at 5 p.m. Several, however, questioned whether the strike was long enough to make enough of a financial dent in the businesses.

“One day is not effective,” Evadur Rahman said. “If we strike more than one day — two, three, four days — they’re gonna be affected.”

Rahman, a Deliveroo driver who planned to participat­e in the strike, said his daily pay dropped in recent months from about $175 for eight hours of work to around $126. He said he wanted the company to raise the minimum rate it pays per order from $3.64 to closer to $6.28.

“They must improve the minimum pay,” Rahman said. “It’s not enough for survival in this country.”

Delivery Job U.K. said 3,000 people planned to strike, but it was unclear how many U.S. drivers participat­ed. Uber said Tuesday that based on past walkouts, it didn’t expect the strike to have much effect on its operations.

“These types of events have rarely had any impact on trips, prices or driver availabili­ty,” Uber said in a statement. “That’s because the vast majority of drivers are satisfied.”

 ?? JOE BURBANK/ORLANDO SENTINEL VIA AP ?? Ride-share drivers protest Wednesday near Orlando Internatio­nal Airport at Airport Lakes Park in Orlando, Fla.
JOE BURBANK/ORLANDO SENTINEL VIA AP Ride-share drivers protest Wednesday near Orlando Internatio­nal Airport at Airport Lakes Park in Orlando, Fla.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States