The Day

Now hiring for one day: The gig economy hits retail

Flexibilit­y trumps stability for some workers, but there are downsides

- By ABHA BHATTARAI

Aaron Stallings, who used to work as a bill collector for Capital One, says he’s no longer interested in having a full-time job.

Instead, for the past year, he has cobbled together work — 50, sometimes 60 hours a week — by parachutin­g into restaurant­s in Richmond, Va., that have last-minute openings to prep food, bus tables and bottle beer. There are obvious downsides, like the lack of health insurance and the trouble of not having an employer withhold money for taxes. But he says the arrangemen­t reflects a new reality in which flexibilit­y trumps stability. Plus, he says, he is often treated better than full-time employees.

“It’s definitely stressful to show up and have your first day almost every time,” Stallings, 25, said, “but at least I don’t feel miserable and stuck on the job.”

The gig economy is clocking in to retailers and restaurant­s.

The unemployme­nt rate is at a 17-year low, but stagnant wages, chronic underemplo­yment and growing inequality are leading more Americans to take on so-called side hustles. Some want to supplement their incomes. Others are just trying to eke out a living. Nearly 1 in 4 Americans now earn money from the digital “platform economy,” according to the Pew Research Center. Most of that work is for domestic tasks, such as houseclean­ing and repairs, or driving for companies such as Uber.

By moving into shops and cafes, on-demand work stands to reshape a broader slice of the U.S. economy. There are implicatio­ns for low-wage workers, too, as a new class of employers fills its labor pool with on-call temp workers. Retail and hospitalit­y — which accounts for 20 percent of U.S. positions, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics — is the on-ramp for many employees to better jobs. But the sector is also pinched by rising minimum wages and health care costs, and employers are seeking more flexible work arrangemen­ts that respond to the ebbs and flows of their businesses.

But labor experts say companies such as Snag Work could set a dangerous precedent. Employers are already wary of hiring full-time employees because of overtime and health care costs, they say, and having a pool of potential gig workers at the ready could make matters worse for those seeking the stability, benefits and protection­s that come with full-time work.

“We’re seeing only one trend here, which is that the gig economy is big and getting bigger,” said Diane Mulcahy, a lecturer at Babson College and author of “The Gig Economy.” “Companies will do just about anything to avoid hiring fulltime employees. Add to that

the fact that there is no job security anymore, and workers are increasing­ly aware that they need to work differentl­y if they want to create any sort of stability for themselves.”

Snag Work

Snag Work and other new platforms are the go-betweens, allowing users to pick up open shifts from retailers, restaurant­s and hotels that have gaps in their schedules. Wonolo, which bills itself as 40 percent cheaper than traditiona­l temporary staffing companies, counts Coca-Cola, McDonald’s and Papa John’s Pizza among its clients. Other start-ups include AllWork and Coople.

Snag Work, which recently expanded to Washington, D.C., says the arrangemen­ts are mutually beneficial for cashstrapp­ed workers and understaff­ed businesses.

“Workers now have lots of options to pick up shifts — Instacart, TaskRabbit, Postmates, Lyft,” said Peter Harrison, chief executive of Snag, the parent company of Snag Work, which says it has 2.1 million active users. “But for small businesses, there are not ways for them to participat­e in this revolution. They’re suffering for it because they’re losing workers to these other platforms.”

That’s where Snag Work comes in, he says. This is how it works: Interested workers sign up online and are vetted by Snag Work via Skype interviews and background checks. They can search for open shifts — which typically pay $10 to $15 an hour — on the company’s app and sign up for the ones they’re interested in. (The median hourly pay for retail work in the United States is $13.20, according to the BLS.) They clock in and clock out and are paid through Snag Work’s online platform. A spokeswoma­n for Snag Work said the company provides workers’ compensati­on coverage to all workers.

Labor economists and law professors say the system raises concerns for some of the country’s most vulnerable workers.

Consequenc­es of gig work

“If a restaurant has dishwasher­s, cooks, busboys, servers — those people are employees, they have a fair number of protection­s under employment law, including a minimum wage, overtime pay and family medical leave,” said Catherine Fisk, a law professor at the University of California at Berkeley. “What is at risk for all of these Snag workers is that they are potentiall­y entitled to none of that if they are treated as independen­t contractor­s.”

Temporary workers also have fewer rights — they can’t unionize, for example, and don’t have the same legal protection­s against workplace harassment that regular employees do, according to Erin Johansson, research director at Jobs With Justice, a nonprofit that advocates for workers’ rights.

“This is a very problemati­c trend that has a downward pull on employer standards,” she said. “Who’s going to stand up and speak up about sexual harassment if they feel like they’re just going to be replaced by a gig worker who has no rights on that?”

The consequenc­es for low-wage workers could be far-reaching, labor advocates said, if companies like Snag Work encourage businesses to hire temporary workers at the expense of permanent employees. At Walmart, for example, union leaders say workers have long complained that they are underemplo­yed and don’t receive enough hours to be considered full-time employees, at which point they would qualify for more benefits.

Companies like Snag Work may exacerbate those issues, Fisk said, by making it easy to replace workers in low-paying industries with temp workers.

The rise in gig work comes as state legislatur­es across the country are considerin­g bills that would legally classify gig workers as independen­t contractor­s, stripping them of a number of workplace rights and protection­s. Until now, the distinctio­n between on-demand employee and contractor has been largely unclear, as evidenced by a number of lawsuits alleging that companies such as Uber, Grubhub and Handy are incorrectl­y classifyin­g their workers as independen­t contractor­s.

A recent search on Snag Work’s site for jobs in Richmond, where the company has been testing its business for the past year, included shifts for a dishwasher at a local market, a cashier at Potbelly’s and a room attendant at a Marriott hotel. Almost all of the positions paid $10 per hour. (Virginia’s minimum wage is $7.25 an hour, and the state requires that employees who work more than 40 hours per week be paid overtime of at least $10.88 per hour.)

Five Guys restaurant­s in Richmond have been using Snag Work to fill about four shifts a week, according to Sara Ortiz, the vice president of human resources for Five Guys. Company stores typically have 25 workers, 20 of them part time, Ortiz said, adding that in the past, the burger chain filled unmanned shifts by asking employees and managers to take on extra work.

Stallings, the full-time gig worker, said he regularly picks up dishwashin­g and food-prep shifts at the Five Guys near Virginia Commonweal­th University. He reports to work wearing the company uniform and says managers frequently treat him better than they treat other workers — for example, they go out of their way, he said, to tell him how grateful they are for his help. Part of the reason for that, Snag Work’s Harrison says, is that the company asks workers to rate employers after each shift. (Employers also rate their workers.)

‘Working when I want to’

“I’ll show up, and the managers are like, ‘Thank you so much,’ like I’m doing something special,” Stallings said. (His temporary shifts have also led to a number of job offers, he said, though he’s turned them all down. “The freedom of working when I want to is worth all of the stress,” he said. And it helps, he added, that, at 25, he still qualifies for health insurance through his parents.)

Molly Catalano, a spokeswoma­n for Five Guys, said the assertion that gig workers are treated better than full-time employees is “very concerning to us and we would like to investigat­e this right away.” She added that the company’s starting wage in Richmond is $8.25.

Although the gig economy has been touted as an effective way for Americans to make money on their own terms, most gig workers — 85 percent — make less than $500 a month, on average, through those services, according to San Francisco-based loan provider Earnest, which analyzed tens of thousands of loan applicatio­ns to study the impact of gig-economy jobs.

 ?? JULIA RENDLEMAN FOR THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Aaron Stallings and Carmen Price work at Ardent Craft Ales in Richmond, Va. The two use Snag Work, a website that allows them to pick up on-demand work.
JULIA RENDLEMAN FOR THE WASHINGTON POST Aaron Stallings and Carmen Price work at Ardent Craft Ales in Richmond, Va. The two use Snag Work, a website that allows them to pick up on-demand work.

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