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Is Deliveroo still letting novice riders loose without lights?

Deliveroo has defended its rider training after one road.cc reader says one of its riders collided with her and a second swore at her

Deliveroo has defended its rider safety and training after a cyclist claimed she was hit by one of its riders cycling at night with no lights and in dark clothing, and sworn at by another.

Last year Deliveroo faced criticism for letting inexperienced riders loose on the streets without lights after a number of its riders were seen riding in the company’s black and blue livery at night without lights, some looking unsteady on their bikes.

One road.cc reader shared an email correspondence with Deliveroo over the two incidents, which took place in February and April. The company says rider safety is its top priority, and that it trains and provides ongoing support to all its delivery staff, but has so far not yet provided a response to either complaint.

Deliveroo criticised for letting inexperienced riders loose without lights

Road.cc reader, Mari Girling, voiced concerns over the standard of riding she has seen among Deliveroo riders, and says she has witnessed “many incidents of bad cycling and motorcycling by [Deliveroo] drivers in Oxford”.

In the most recent incident she describes an altercation with a cyclist wearing Deliveroo livery who, she says “cut me up on the inside while I was cycling in heavy traffic”.

”I said to him, ‘Don't pass me on the inside’,” she says.

“He then matched his speed to mine so that I could not pull in behind or in front of him. I asked him to let me in, and he said F- off. I said ‘Don't swear at me,’ and he said ‘F- OFF’ again.”

In an earlier incident one evening in February, she claims a Deliveroo rider pulled across her path at a junction, and hit her.

She says: “I initially thought he was a motorbike because of the size of [the] black delivery box. He had no lights and was wearing dark clothing.”

She says she stopped at a junction, checked the road was clear, and pulled out.

“At this point [the] delivery cyclist pulled out alongside me, turned across me and rode into me,” she says. “He hit my arm, lower leg and foot. I nearly came off.”

She says after the collision the rider apologised, and then rode off.

“He did not seem at all stable on his bike. I was hurt (although not badly and it did not last) and shaken up.”

She has raised concerns the box can look unstable on some bikes and because it is black, can make the rider hard to spot on the roads at night, at times obscuring a rider’s lights, if they are fitted.

Girling claims she has not yet received a response beyond a brief message, which road.cc has seen, stating the matter was passed to the company’s Driver Management Team, on 8 February.

Deliveroo says it provides safety equipment to its riders, and though it won’t comment on individual cases the company says it investigates each incident reported.

A Deliveroo spokesperson told road.cc: “The safety of our riders, and all others on the roads in which we operate, is our top priority.

“We provide our riders with top quality safety equipment, including helmets and lights.

“Before riding with us, applicants complete a trial session to ensure they ride safely, confidently and at the required standard. Once this standard is met, our riders complete a programme of road safety training, with additional support available throughout their time riding with us.”  

“Our training and equipment practices are constantly evolving. We continue to consult with a number of leading road safety organisations in the process of further safety training and equipment development.

“While we do not comment on individual cases, we operate a full customer and rider support service. Through this we work to investigate all sides of each incident reported and resolve all issues brought to our attention by members of the public and riders.”

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36 comments

Avatar
Broady. | 8 years ago
4 likes

The Leeds Deliveroo cyclists are shocking, constantly see them blasting through red lights and cutting in front of buses with no lights, no helmet and headphones in. Only a matter of time before one of them ends up seriously hurt if they haven't already.

Avatar
JTE | 8 years ago
2 likes

I've never once seen a Deliveroo cyclists stop at a red light.  This isn't good enough.

When (not if) I see a car collect a rider and their prescious pizza cargo, I'm pretty sure I'll have more sympathy (and time for writing a witness report) for the innocent driver, or for any pedestrian who is injured.

Dear Deliveroo,

Do yourselves and other road users a favour... obey the rules.

Thanks,

Road user

 

Personally, I'm on the fence as to whether cyclists using the road ought to be identified/identifiable when riding (to create some sort of accountability), but I'm wholly in favour of any business (including Deliveroo, or any individual running a courier services) who wants to use cycling as a means to make profits being compelled to register their riders and allow them to be easily identifable (and accountable) when on the job.  Why? Because the profit motive can cloud judgment on the roads as much as any other intoxicant. 

Avatar
bogbrush | 8 years ago
1 like

Did a little work for deliveroo and found it very enjoyable.

I can see why people would be having these isssues though. My on the bike training took at most an hour and was conducted without a box on my bike, the boxes do make it difficult to mount effective lights, and there is absolutely no ongoing oversight of your road behaviour once you are cleared to work.

Avatar
alexb | 8 years ago
1 like

I work in South Kensington and Deliveroo riders are a menace, whether on mopeds or bikes. At least the mopeds have lights, most of the bikes don't or often if they do, they're either the smallest blinky possible, looped through the clip on the box, or attached to the rack, under the box and therefore invisible.

Using standard bike racks and enormous delivery boxes makes no sense on a bike - they do seem to make the riders very unstable.

 

Avatar
Username | 8 years ago
0 likes

Surely there are other things to worry about on our roads. The drivers of the red 3 tonne vans, the ones with the crown painted on them, are no saints.

Avatar
Poptart242 replied to Username | 8 years ago
21 likes

Username wrote:

Surely there are other things to worry about on our roads. The drivers of the red 3 tonne vans, the ones with the crown painted on them, are no saints.

 

Or you could have the ability to have concerns about more than one thing at once.

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