Las Vegas Review-Journal

Eateries: Delivery fees curb revenue

30 percent from all orders called burden

- By Al Mancini Las Vegas Review-journal

“You may not know that food delivery apps such as Postmates, Uber Eats and Grubhub take 30 percent of every single order placed through their platforms, even pickup orders,” restaurant owner Kristen Corral told the Clark County Board of Commission­ers on Tuesday morning.

Corral, who owns the two local Tacotarian restaurant­s, explained to the commission­ers that before the COVID-19 pandemic, those fees “were considered a necessary evil by most restaurant owners.”

But things are different now, she said.

“Now restaurant­s are being forced to rely on delivery and takeout as a primary source of income. And we are now giving away 30 percent of nearly our entire revenue. This is not sustainabl­e, and it should not be legal.”

Corral lobbied Clark County to cap the fees charged by delivery apps during the current crisis. It marked the first time that the idea, which has been gaining traction in cities across the country, formally has been raised here.

Segerblom proposes

The proposal was placed on Tuesday’s schedule as a “discussion item” by Commission­er Tick Segerblom after Corral brought the issue to his attention.

“When she alerted me to (the situation), I checked it out and saw that all kinds of cities around the country are capping these delivery fees,” Segerblom explained to the Review-journal before the meeting. “So I told her I’d propose it.”

While the social distancing guidelines for the meetings made it impractica­l for Corral to rally local

restaurate­urs in person, she brought letters from several local business owners in support of a fee cap.

She was joined at the meeting by the Nevada Restaurant Associatio­n’s director of government affairs, Alexandria Dazlich, who echoed Corral’s sentiments that a cap is needed.

Later in the meeting, commission­ers asked the county counsel to

draft an ordinance that would cap fees at 10 percent for six months, noting that those figures could be changed when that ordinance is presented for discussion and a vote.

While that language could be presented as early as Aug. 4, it’s just the next of many steps.

“It’s a long process,” Segerblom explained of what must transpire before any cap could take effect.

“You have to notify all the businesses. It’s complicate­d. But basically this is the first step of the process.”

Corral was pleased with the progress.

“It was good; I’m excited,” she said after Tuesday’s meeting, vowing to get more support before the next one.

“It was last minute, so I didn’t get a chance to get letters from everybody,” she said. “But as people get more aware, I’m going to reach out to more people.”

Contact Al Mancini at amancini @reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @Almanciniv­egas on Twitter and Instagram.

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