Los Angeles Times

Don’t Uberize home cooks

- Christina Oatfield is policy director of the Sustainabl­e Economies Law Center in Oakland. She once operated an undergroun­d restaurant out of her apartment. By Christina Oatf ield

Iteamed up with a bread baker, urban farmers and homebased food makers to advocate for the California Homemade Food Act, a law that allows for the sale of homemade foods that are low-risk and do not require refrigerat­ion, such as breads and jams. Thousands of new enterprise­s were formed or became legal under the act, many of them owned by women, immigrants and small-crop farmers.

The Homemade Food Act was a good start, but it was limited. Many more homemade products, including more-perishable foods, would be safe to sell from our home kitchens with appropriat­e oversight.

Now a proposed expansion of the law, Assembly Bill 626, is making its way through the California Legislatur­e, and you’d think I’d be on board. But this bill isn’t the product of bakers, home cooks and farmers; it’s backed by gig economy tech companies. It would allow sales of homemade meals through web apps that take a cut of cooks’ earnings.

AB 626 passed in the Assembly in January; it’s due for a Senate committee vote Wednesday. It shouldn’t get any further.

If AB 626 becomes law, the homemade food market would likely become dominated by big companies like Airbnb and Uber. The trajectory of these businesses is rapid growth fueled by venture capital and aimed at disrupting and then monopolizi­ng a market. They disregard important public safety laws and worker protection­s by treating the workers as independen­t contractor­s. They could easily overwhelm the homemade food economy just as they have ride hailing, delivery services and vacation rentals.

Food-system jobs are among the lowest paid in our society, but at least most food workers are employees who are entitled to minimum wage, overtime, workers’ compensati­on insurance, and other protection­s. If homemade food is dominated by gig economy tech companies, home cooks could end up working in situations where their net earnings are less than minimum wage. Companies such as Uber and TaskRabbit take 15% to 30% of the earnings of their workers. Margins are so tight for home cooks, they wouldn’t be able to survive.

Yes, we should have a more permissive homemade food law in California, and there’s nothing wrong with allowing web apps to facilitate it. But the Legislatur­e should require that third-party web applicatio­ns used to order and distribute the food must be owned and controlled by cooks and delivery workers, nonprofit organizati­ons, or local government­s — not by big technology companies.

This may sound heavy-handed, but long-standing California law already prohibits big food companies from operating farmers markets. Only nonprofits, government­al organizati­ons and farmers themselves are allowed to run the markets; they exist to support growers and consumers, not middlemen.

We can also learn from Austin, Texas, when it comes to incorporat­ing web apps into a service economy. In 2016, Austin enacted safety regulation­s for ride-hailing services Uber and Lyft, causing both companies to decamp from the city. What emerged in their place was a remarkable f lourishing of local ride hailing apps, including the nonprofit RideAustin and the driver-owned ATX Co-op Taxi. Both offer better pay for drivers along with the convenienc­e of mobile phone apps. Such community-based alternativ­es could never compete with Silicon Valley tech giants.

Just as we don’t let Amazon, Walmart and Ralphs operate farmers markets in California, we shouldn’t let Uber Eats run our homemade food economy. Markets need basic regulation­s to avoid monopoliza­tion and to protect workers and consumers. AB 626 betrays the food movement for the benefit of Big Tech. The Legislatur­e should reject it and instead work with food makers and community organizati­ons on a more just approach to expanding the Homemade Food Act.

Consumers, farmers and cooks deserve better than the Uberizatio­n of homemade food.

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