Mayor de Blasio Announces Additional Actions to Improve Safety, Health, and Working Conditions for 65,000+ Delivery Workers

December 21, 2021NEW YORK— Mayor Bill  de Blasio today announced, in advance of legal workplace protections that go  into effect in 2022, that he has marshalled agencies together to implement a  series of additional efforts to support and improve the health, safety and  working conditions for the city’s 65,000+ delivery workers.“Delivery  workers have served as essential workers throughout the pandemic and we’re  grateful for their contributions to New York City’s economy,” said Mayor  Bill de Blasio. “These increased safety measures and labor protections are  key to helping delivery workers recover and thrive.” "It is not an  exaggeration to say that delivery workers kept our City running throughout the  pandemic. At great personal risk, they have delivered goods to homebound New  Yorkers and have kept our small businesses afloat," said J.  Phillip Thompson, Deputy Mayor for Strategic Policy Initiatives. "I  applaud the organizing effort of advocacy organizations who have helped secure  basic workplace protections for delivery workers, and hope that these measures  taken by the City can continue to uplift and support these essential  workers."“In 2022, we will regulate for  the first time the growing number of delivery app companies and enforce  brand-new labor standards for delivery workers, including minimum pay standards  and the right to control their routes,” said Department of Consumer and  Worker Protection (DCWP) Commissioner Peter A. Hatch. “And today we are  proud to help deliver new City resources that address immediate concerns of  delivery workers who have done so much to fuel New York through the pandemic.”“As they have shown by supporting residents and restaurants across  the boroughs time and again, delivery workers are a crucial pillar of New York  City,” said Lorraine Grillo, the City’s Senior Advisor for Recovery.  “These measures to advance their workplace safety, and initiatives to recognize  their importance to our city, are a critical step in protecting these essential  workers and in creating a fair and equitable recovery for all New Yorkers.”“While some New Yorkers  utilize delivery workers for convenience, many others rely on them as the key  to survival during the ongoing pandemic. Their work is hard and their days are  long, but they have also been preyed upon by criminals. 

Delivery workers have  been targeted for money and e-bikes. The NYPD is in touch with the associations  that represent them and officers have enhanced their focus by adding cameras on  key routes and serial numbers to help identify stolen bikes. We underline that  the NYPD does not share with immigration authorities any information about  victims or witnesses. The NYPD remains committed to doing all it can to protect  these essential workers,” said Police Commissioner Dermot Shea.“Since the onset of the pandemic, delivery workers were on the  frontlines of this crisis, showing us that they have and will continue to be  essential to our city,” said Raquel Batista, Commissioner of the  Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs. “These actions are a significant win  to ensure the safety and livelihood of this community. MOIA looks forward to  working with our sister agencies to ensure deliveristas know their rights.”“Whether it is on the job safety or access to healthcare, delivery  workers deserve to be treated with respect and as a city, we must deliver for  them on these basic rights,” said Jonnel Doris, NYC Department of Small  Business Services Commissioner. At SBS we are committed to advocating for  New Yorkers working hard to make a living. So, we welcome the new protections  and look forward to seeing them implemented in the coming months.”“During the  pandemic, New Yorkers came to see our delivery workers for what they truly are:  essential employees,” said DOT Commissioner Hank Gutman.   “We thank our colleagues at NYPD and DCWP for their excellent coordinated  work to keep these workers safe, including brighter bridge crossings and more  assistance for workers victimized by crime.  At DOT, we will continue our  dedicated efforts to get these workers the best delivery cyclist education as  well as have them fitted with helmets and other safety equipment crucial to the  job.”“Delivery workers are the  backbone of our service industry, and the COVID-19 pandemic disproportionately  affects their health and livelihood,” said NYC Care Senior Director  Jonathan Jimenez, MD. “NYC Care and NYC Health + Hospitals is proud to  serve them and excited to make sure all delivery workers, regardless of income  or immigration status, know they have a right to high-quality healthcare at NYC  Health + Hospitals.”This  work would not have been possible without dedicated advocates like the Workers  Justice Project and Los Deliveristas Unidos."With  Worker’s Justice Project’s support, app-based delivery workers have been  organizing as Los Deliveristas Unidos in New York City for the past two years.  While delivering New Yorker’s food, Deliveristas mobilized 4,000  delivery workers from Times Square to City Hall to push for historic  legislative reforms that provide rights and improve the working  conditions of app-based delivery workers. In partnership with  elected officials, New York City has become the first city in the  nation to deliver justice and essential protections for delivery workers,  including regulating delivery distance, minimum pay standards, and bathroom  access. We look forward to continuing partnering with the City of New York to  ensure these hard-fought regulations are enforced and make a difference in  workers’ lives," said Ligia Guallpa, Executive Director of Worker""s Justice  Project (WJP). #EssentialToNYC Campaign  This  month, the City is launching a digital art campaign, #EssentialToNYC,  reaffirming support for delivery workers and other essential workers, including  bodega and grocery store workers, home care workers, nail salon technicians and  all aestheticians, and taxi workers and all workers who transport New Yorkers.  Featuring real New Yorkers of these professions, the campaign will highlight  the importance of these workers in keeping the City running, connect New  Yorkers to resources, and encourage New Yorkers to stand in solidarity against  acts of discrimination, harassment, and violence that many essential workers  continue to face. For more information, graphics and resources, visit here.Safety  In response to many issues brought forward by directly  impacted workers, the City is providing: additional lighting and NYPD cameras at  Willis Avenue Bridge bike paths; additional safety resources at bridge  crossings into Manhattan; a bike etching program to recover stolen  e-bikes; expansion of DOT’s traffic safety education  and helmet giveaways for delivery workersHealthcare Access  NYC Care has launched a new initiative to actively working  to enroll delivery workers who are un/underinsured. To enroll in NYC Care, New  Yorkers can call 1-646-NYC-Care. For more information, visit www.nyccare.nyc.Worker Protection  The City has provided DCWP with funding to implement and  enforce the new laws regulating delivery apps and worker protections that go  into effect in 2022. Starting January 24, many food delivery apps must be  licensed by DCWP, bringing needed oversight to the industry. Apps will be able  to begin applying for licenses later this month. Starting January 24, licensed  apps must tell workers the tip for each delivery and the total pay and tips for  the previous day.The law also seeks to provide increased access to bathrooms  for workers of licensed apps.Delivery workers who deliver food for any app—not just  licensed apps—will also have additional new rights April 22, 2022 and January  1, 2023.  Starting April 22, 2022, apps  must: Give  workers a required notice explaining their new rights.Give  workers more control over their deliveries. Workers can limit how far they will  go from restaurants and refuse to use bridges or tunnels.Tell  workers trip details before they accept a delivery. Must include address for  pickup, estimated time and distance for trip, tip if known, pay.Pay  workers at least once a week. Apps cannot charge a fee to process payment.Give  workers a free insulated food delivery bag after give deliveries.Starting January 1, 2023, apps  must pay workers the new minimum pay rate that the City will set. The rate will  not include tips. DCWP is meeting with relevant stakeholders, including  workers, for the wage structure study it will be conducting to determine the  new minimum rate.Delivery workers, apps, restaurants and consumer can  monitor nyc.gov/DeliveryApps in the coming weeks and months for  multilingual information about these regulations. DCWP was also recently funded  to mount a public awareness campaign for workers in spring 2022. “I  celebrate Mayor de Blasio for his forceful, whole-of-government  approach to improving working conditions for the Deliveristas in  New York City, ” said Senator Charles Schumer. “New laws and  energetic efforts by city agencies are a critical step in ensuring dignity and  safety for thousands of delivery workers, who risked their lives to keep  us fed during the pandemic. I look forward to continuing to support the  organizing of delivery workers and coordinating with city partners to secure  justice for these essential workers. ” “I am so  happy that the city is taking bold transformative steps to give delivery  workers the protections and benefits that they deserve. It is of utmost  importance that the city also provide adequate language service for these  essential workers who require translation to ensure they can access  every benefit we are rolling out. Delivery workers are vital  to our city""s economy and I am proud that the city is taking a multi-prong  approach to providing immediate relief for these hard-working New  Yorkers,” said Council Member Margaret Chin."Delivery  workers have been on the frontlines of the pandemic, keeping New Yorkers going  at great personal risk. Their organizing for fair pay, dignity, and protections  is transforming this industry. 

I""m proud that NYC will be the first in the  nation to require minimum pay for delivery workers, and that our city is taking  strong steps to address the harassment and safety issues that workers face  every day," said Council Member Brad Lander. “Food delivery workers kept us  alive and fed during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. We also saw them defy  extreme weather. The will once again being called upon as the city sees a rise  of infections, hospitalizations, and deaths resulting from the Omicron variant.  They are truly heroes,” said Council Member Carlos Menchaca, Chair of the  Committee on Immigration. “I was proud to join my colleagues, Worker  Justice Project and Los Deliveristas Unidos in passing a legislative package  that dignifies their work and brings accountability to big corporate delivery  apps, including my bill to ensure app companies can no longer exploit food  delivery workers by delaying payments through fees or bank requirements. Every  worker deserves equal and immediate access to their pay, without having to pay  a fee for their own money. For too long, delivery app companies have taken advantage  of their status to exploit their labor, while the City has ignored them because  of their inability to navigate our often complicated and bureaucratic systems.  As we unveil new initiatives to help delivery workers, we must never forget  that that workers have the power and we must follow their lead in order to  create a more equitable city.”"Advancing worker protections is how this City can  ensure it does not leave behind minority and immigrant communities during  our recovery. These delivery workers kept our city moving during the height of  this pandemic, the minimum we can do is ensure they have access to living  wages, health care and safer working conditions. This is how New York City can  have the backs of these workers and create a more equitable city,"  said Council Member Francisco Moya.“For nearly two years, my colleagues and I have had the honor of  working closely with the Workers Justice Project and Los Deliveristas Unidos in  pursuit of rights, protections, and justice for New York City’s delivery  workers. In September, in testament to the organizing power of our City’s  Deliveristas, the City Council passed a historic package of legislation  codifying critical workplace protections. I am grateful to Mayor de Blasio, the  Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs, the Department of Consumer and Worker  Protection, and the Department of Small Business Services for joining us in  acknowledging deliveristas as the essential workers they are, and bringing even  greater protections to these workers as early as next year,” said Council  Member Carlina Rivera. “Delivery workers continue to play an essential role in helping  keep New Yorkers safe during the pandemic despite being denied basic worker  protections under law and often have been exploited without redress. The new  legal workplace protections for delivery workers adopted by the City are the  result of a hard-earned advocacy effort spearheaded by Los Deliveristas Unidos  and represent a historic victory that ensures delivery workers - many of whom  are first generation immigrants - will be treated with dignity and respect and  paid fairly. We commend the de Blasio administration and the City Council for  championing the rights of vulnerable workers and urge the incoming Adams  administration and City Council to work with delivery workers to ensure that  this victory is not merely symbolic but is reinforced with the adequate  resources to make the protections real for delivery workers and their  families,” said Jason Cone, Chief Public Policy Officer of Robin Hood,  New York""s largest poverty fighting philanthropy.   “Delivery workers brought New  York City through some of its darkest days, and we’re glad to see the City  deliver essential workplace protections to keep our frontline workers safe,”  said Danny Harris, Transportation Alternatives Executive Director.  “No delivery worker should fear for their safety while biking, and the  protections announced today will help keep delivery cyclists safe on the job.  

We look forward to our continued advocacy to expand the protected bike lane  network in order to provide workers more safe routes around the city."Workers  in NYC""s gig-economy, and specifically app food delivery workers fall in gray  areas or outright gaps of existing legal frameworks of employment rights. Our  report revealed that one significant problem for workers remains the lack of  regulations defining the employment status, their rights and their relationship  with the app platforms companies," stated Patricia Campos-Medina,  Executive Director of the Worker Institute @ ILR Cornell. "Public  officials in NYC have a role to play in improving the lives of food  delivery workers, and we are eager to continue to partner up with city  officials, workers leaders"" members of Los Deliveristas Unidos/the Worker  Justice Project, to advance best practices for improving the rights and lives  of these essential workers who kept NYC open during the worse days of the  pandemic."  “Over the  course of the pandemic, we have seen a lot of flowery appreciation for  essential workers, but seen concrete steps only when workers have been  organized.  And NYC responded! We look forward to partnering with Los  Deliveristas Unidos and NYC to ensure the implementation of these policies for  all delivery workers,” said Fahd Ahmed, Executive Director, DRUM - Desis  Rising Up & Moving.“For more than a decade,  Deliveristas have helped feed New Yorkers while keeping our vital restaurant  industry afloat. The story of the Deliverista is the story of New York in so  many ways; hardworking, gritty, diverse, resilient and relentless, they truly  represent the very best of our city. It’s far past time for us time to offer  them common sense protections like minimum wage guarantees, safe streets and  secure parking options that will make their work much easier. We applaud the  City for giving Deliveristas the recognition they deserve and look forward to  working with officials to implement these important protections,” said Shabazz  Stuart, Founder & CEO of Oonee. ###

日期:2022/08/26点击:17