Soaring demand for food delivered fast has spawned small armies of couriers — and increasing alarm — in big cities where scooters, motorcycles and mopeds zip in and out of traffic and hop onto pedestrian-filled sidewalks as their drivers race to drop off salads and sandwiches.
Officials in Boston, New York and Washington have started cracking down on delivery companies by issuing warning letters, seizing illegally registered or driven vehicles, and launching special street patrols to enforce speed limits.
The pushback is not limited to the US: There have also been a series of crackdowns in London and other British cities.
Photo: AP
For their part, the delivery companies have pledged to work with city officials to ensure that all of their drivers operate both legally and safely.
In a letter this week to food delivery companies DoorDash Inc, Grubhub Inc and Uber Eats, Boston officials cited an “alarming increase in unlawful and dangerous operation of motorcycles, mopeds and motorized scooters” that they said put the drivers, other motorists and pedestrians “in imminent danger.”
The letter said that some drivers were operating unregistered vehicles and breaking traffic laws, and warned of an imminent crackdown on the vehicles.
It also demanded that the companies explain how they can ensure their drivers are operating safely.
The Massachusetts State Police said they identified dozens of mopeds and scooters that were improperly registered or being operated by unlicensed drivers.
Fourteen illegal mopeds and scooters were seized on Wednesday in one Boston neighborhood alone.
In New York City, authorities have seized 13,000 scooters and mopeds so far this year. On Wednesday, they crushed more than 200 illegal mopeds and other delivery vehicles.
Meanwhile, authorities in Washington on Wednesday launched a program called Operation Ride Right to ensure drivers of two-wheeled vehicles are complying with the law. Since it began, authorities have arrested five people and impounded 17 mopeds.
“They have terrorized many of our pedestrians, particularly our senior and older adults,” New York City Mayor Eric Adams told an event on Wednesday in which motorized two-wheeled delivery vehicles were destroyed. “Riders who think the rules don’t apply to them, they’re going to see an aggressive enforcement policy that’s in place.”
When food delivery services had their major resurgence during the COVID-19 pandemic, most drivers used cars to deliver their fare. That led to increased traffic congestion, prompting a shift to motorcycles and other two-wheeled modes of transportation.
The drivers, many of them immigrants from Latin American countries, but also from West Africa and South Asia, say they are just trying to earn a living and are providing a service that gets customers their food fast.
“We’re not all bad,” said Luis Lopez, a delivery driver from the Dominican Republic who was speaking on Friday from his motorcycle in an area of multiple fast-food restaurants near the Boston Public Library. “We come to work, to earn a living, pay the rent and send something to our families.”
Lopez, who came to the US about three years ago, said that some drivers are unlicensed or driving unregistered vehicles, and he has seen them running red lights and onto sidewalks, menacing pedestrians.
Some people are so reckless that they are also putting other delivery drivers at risk, he said.
He said that he was among a group of 10 delivery drivers outside a Chick-fil-A on Thursday night when a police officer approached them with a flyer describing how to register their scooters and mopeds.
The whole group agreed to do just that.
“We have to respect the law,” he said, speaking in Spanish. “We are going to respect the law so that they let us work here.”
Drivers of motorized two-wheeled vehicles are coming under much more scrutiny than years ago by other gig workers in cars, such as Uber and Lyft Inc drivers, because they can more easily contravene traffic laws, said Hilary Robinson, an associate professor of law and sociology at Northeastern University.
The switch to the vehicles “is really an attempt to make low-wage, high-risk labor available so that all of us can have cheap goods and services,” Robinson said. “It’s perhaps one of the reasons why people are starting to realize that there really is no such thing as a free lunch.”
William Medina, a delivery worker in New York who is also an organizing leader with the Los Deliveristas Unidos Campaign, blames the delivery companies.
“This is a problem that started because the companies force you to complete the deliveries from far distances,” he said in a telephone interview on Friday.
Medina started out delivering food on a bicycle, switched to an electric bike, and now is using a moped to make the longer trips.
“If you have to complete the delivery 6 miles [97.km], 7 miles, you have to complete it,” he said.
Among those advocating for tougher enforcement is Boston City Councilor Edward Flynn, who wrote on Facebook that it “can no longer be the Wild West on the streets of Boston.”
“Everyone using city roads needs to abide by the rules of the road. If you’re able to go 25mph [40.23kph] like a car — you should be licensed, registered and carry liability insurance in the event of an accident and injury,” he wrote.
Some Boston residents are supportive of tougher action against the scooters.
“I get frustrated when they don’t follow the traffic laws,” said Anne Kirby, a 25-year-old student having lunch in a Boston neighborhood within a few hundred meters of several scooters. “I feel like I almost get hit every day when they go through the crosswalk when it’s not their turn to go.”
Jaia Samuel, a 25-year-old hospital worker from Boston, was more conflicted.
She said she agreed that delivery scooters can be dangerous, but she also acknowledged that she relies heavily on delivery services for her food.
“I do think it’s unsafe to an extent, the weaving in between cars and the not stopping for red lights,” she said. “But I feel like everybody should be able to make a living, so who am I to say anything? It would be unfortunate for me. I would be taking a hit with the crackdown on them. I order a lot of Uber Eats, DoorDash.”
Three major food delivery services have pledged to work with officials and neighborhood advocates to address the problem.
“The overwhelming majority of Dashers do the right thing and like all drivers must follow the rules of the road. If they don’t, then they face consequences — just like anyone else,” DoorDash said in a statement.
Grubhub said its employees already agree to obey all local traffic laws.
“While enforcement of the law is best handled by the police, we take safety seriously and will take action to address any reports of unsafe driving,” the company said in a statement.
To many, Tatu City on the outskirts of Nairobi looks like a success. The first city entirely built by a private company to be operational in east Africa, with about 25,000 people living and working there, it accounts for about two-thirds of all foreign investment in Kenya. Its low-tax status has attracted more than 100 businesses including Heineken, coffee brand Dormans, and the biggest call-center and cold-chain transport firms in the region. However, to some local politicians, Tatu City has looked more like a target for extortion. A parade of governors have demanded land worth millions of dollars in exchange
An Indonesian animated movie is smashing regional box office records and could be set for wider success as it prepares to open beyond the Southeast Asian archipelago’s silver screens. Jumbo — a film based on the adventures of main character, Don, a large orphaned Indonesian boy facing bullying at school — last month became the highest-grossing Southeast Asian animated film, raking in more than US$8 million. Released at the end of March to coincide with the Eid holidays after the Islamic fasting month of Ramadan, the movie has hit 8 million ticket sales, the third-highest in Indonesian cinema history, Film
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co’s (TSMC, 台積電) revenue jumped 48 percent last month, underscoring how electronics firms scrambled to acquire essential components before global tariffs took effect. The main chipmaker for Apple Inc and Nvidia Corp reported monthly sales of NT$349.6 billion (US$11.6 billion). That compares with the average analysts’ estimate for a 38 percent rise in second-quarter revenue. US President Donald Trump’s trade war is prompting economists to retool GDP forecasts worldwide, casting doubt over the outlook for everything from iPhone demand to computing and datacenter construction. However, TSMC — a barometer for global tech spending given its central role in the
Alchip Technologies Ltd (世芯), an application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) designer specializing in server chips, expects revenue to decline this year due to sagging demand for 5-nanometer artificial intelligence (AI) chips from a North America-based major customer, a company executive said yesterday. That would be the first contraction in revenue for Alchip as it has been enjoying strong revenue growth over the past few years, benefiting from cloud-service providers’ moves to reduce dependence on Nvidia Corp’s expensive AI chips by building their own AI accelerator by outsourcing chip design. The 5-nanometer chip was supposed to be a new growth engine as the lifecycle