San Francisco Chronicle

New York sued over fee cap

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Three of the nation’s largest food delivery companies are suing New York City over a limit on fees it put in place during the pandemic to protect restaurant­s devastated by the forced closure of their dining rooms.

The city has continued to extend those caps even as vaccinatio­ns allow more indoor dining which, according to the companies, cost them millions of dollars over the summer.

In the suit filed late Thursday in federal court, DoorDash, Grubhub and Uber Eats call the fee caps government overreach. The companies say they were “instrument­al in keeping restaurant­s afloat and food industry workers employed” after investing millions of dollars in relief for those businesses.

They are filing for an injunction that would prevent the city from enforcing an extension on the fee caps adopted in August. The companies are seeking unspecifie­d monetary damages as well as a jury trial.

New York Law Department spokesman Nicholas Paolucci said in an email that the city’s initiative is legally sound and will be defended in court.

The city of New York first enacted the price cap in May 2020 in response to the pandemic, limiting the rate that third-party platforms could charge restaurant­s at 15% of an online order for delivery services, and 5% for all other services, including marketing.

Last month, New York City Council pushed forward an extension on the fee caps that would not expire until at least early next year.

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