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Deliveroo cyclists short of work as company prioritises cars

Cyclists suddenly find they are unable to work enough hours following unexpected change to Deliveroo app

Deliveroo riders in Nottingham say they are suffering a “slow redundancy” after the food delivery firm recently started to prioritise moped riders and drivers.

Nottinghamshire Live reports that several Deliveroo cyclists have seen the number of shifts available to them sharply diminish in recent weeks.

Stew Kemp, who had worked to become a ‘priority rider’ by regularly covering weekend shifts, said he was now looking for another job.

While he also works part-time in a shop, he says this is not enough to cover his bills and money for food.

"I had been working and I've seen our numbers dwindle," he said. "So I asked my mate and he said he only had one hour of work for the week.

"It's horrible to be doing it for almost two years in the snow and the rain and everything to be cancelled out."

Greg Howard, a Deliveroo rider and chairman of the Nottingham Riders Network, explained that a new metric known as 'vehicle priority' now rewarded those in motor vehicles as they could better serve customers outside of the city boundary.

“I find it abhorrent,” he said. “It's a slow redundancy."

Howard said Deliveroo had removed all advertisements for cyclists, even though the first order was made on a bicycle by co-founder Will Shu.

"This is not affecting London or Bristol because you do not have to wait to book shifts,” he said. “In Nottingham you do."

A Deliveroo spokesman said: "Deliveroo is on a mission to ensure that everyone has access to amazing meals, delivered. To achieve this in certain areas we need to ensure we have the right fleet mix to match the growth in customer demand.

"We have made a small change to our online booking portal which will mean that as we create more work in Nottingham, we will have enough vehicles capable of also making longer distance orders that customers want.

"Deliveroo isn’t saying goodbye to pedal power, quite the opposite in fact, and will also continue to roll out measures such as subsidised e-bike schemes."

Deliveroo wins self-employment case over delivery cyclists

Kemp said: "I got into Deliveroo because I was in a terrible job where I was treated badly and it gave me anxiety.

"Deliveroo helped me come off my anxiety tablets but now it has made me more worried. I work 15 hours a week in a shop which only covers my rent and council tax.

"I'm on an electricity meter and I have no money for food. You used to be able to log in and get any shifts, cancel when you wanted but now there's no leeway, it's completely strict.

"It used to be only within a three-mile radius and now they're saying you need to cycle from West Bridgford to Bulwell. The priority should be for cyclists not vehicles."

On Friday, riders in Nottingham and Leeds went on strike about the changes. A petition has also been launched asking that cyclists be given fair access to work.

Alex has written for more cricket publications than the rest of the road.cc team combined. Despite the apparent evidence of this picture, he doesn't especially like cake.

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8 comments

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ajft | 4 years ago
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I was in a local cafe when a delivery rider came in to pick up pizzas -- can't remember which of the deliveroo/ubereats/other brand it was.  Cafe owner went absolutely off his rocker at her, yelling that "I told them many times, NO BIKES, you get out, you get lost!"  He came over to us after she left, seems he has a bee in his bonnet that bike riders toss the food about but moped riders don't.  He says "its the pedal motion, it just has to throw the food one way and the other, the pizza ends up all over the place and the customers blame me"

Avatar
EddyBerckx | 4 years ago
4 likes

Firstly this is fucking awful on an extra congestion/pollution and so on standpoint - totally going against the tide of making cities healthier places to be - they should be pulled up on this.

 

Secondly how the hell can people run a car or even a moped on the low wages they pay? I'd say it's near impossible unless you're totally fucking off the highway code and law. Again, they should be pulled up on this...fucking bad move by them.

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kitsunegari replied to EddyBerckx | 4 years ago
0 likes

StoopidUserName wrote:

Firstly this is fucking awful on an extra congestion/pollution and so on standpoint - totally going against the tide of making cities healthier places to be - they should be pulled up on this.

Fast food delivery companies don't give a stuff about making cities healthier places to be.

Avatar
crazy-legs | 4 years ago
4 likes

A mate does Deliveroo work. He just told them he had a car. So he gets loads of work but does it all on his bike!

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Redvee replied to crazy-legs | 4 years ago
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crazy-legs wrote:

A mate does Deliveroo work. He just told them he had a car. So he gets loads of work but does it all on his bike!

 

That was my thoughts too. I'm thinking about doing Deliveroo to top up my wages when I get a mortgage on my flat, although there is overtime available at work it means a 20 mile round trip to work plus the time at work whereas I can do Deliveroo quite literally on my doorstep as the takeaway I live above offers Deliveroo so I can sit at home refreshing the app if I go that route.

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Rick_Rude | 4 years ago
0 likes

I guess it's all about speed of service. Bicycle ain't going to best moped for blasting about. If you get one of the 100mpg mopeds you may be able to do ok for yourself.

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StuInNorway | 4 years ago
2 likes

While I feel for the folk who have worked hard at this, it's the risk of this type of work. There is no guaranteed work, and as thy are officially self employed, the only person in their chain of commend to complain to is themselves.
Might be an interesting experiment for the police in areas where these firms are roling out more motor vehicles to deliver under the same "self employed" rules to order some food and check if the drivers turning up actually have commercial insurance on their cars. I also still feel that it should be illegal for someone holding a provisional moped licence to earn money as a rider delivering food, you can't go out in a 44 ton artic doing deliveries before you have passed the practical test.

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Prosper0 replied to StuInNorway | 4 years ago
1 like

StuInNorway wrote:

While I feel for the folk who have worked hard at this, it's the risk of this type of work. There is no guaranteed work, and as thy are officially self employed, the only person in their chain of commend to complain to is themselves.
Might be an interesting experiment for the police in areas where these firms are roling out more motor vehicles to deliver under the same "self employed" rules to order some food and check if the drivers turning up actually have commercial insurance on their cars. I also still feel that it should be illegal for someone holding a provisional moped licence to earn money as a rider delivering food, you can't go out in a 44 ton artic doing deliveries before you have passed the practical test.

 

Quite. Someone riding a bike ‘should’ have significantly lower overheads than these drivers, the commercial edge will come through eventually. Is there not enough business in town for the Deliveroo cyclists then? Hard to believe with two massive universities. 

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