DoorDash has agreed to pay nearly $17 million to settle claims it shorted thousands of delivery workers out of tip money paid by customers, New York Attorney General Letitia James announced Monday. Some 60,
New Yorkers placed more than 11 million delivery orders with DoorDash during that period, James said, adding that about 63,000 New York delivery workers are expected to benefit from the settlement. In resolving the probe,
DoorDash has been ordered to pay $16.8M to NY couriers for tip misuse. Learn how this settlement impacts drivers and the company's policies.
A years-long scandal affecting DoorDash delivery gig workers has finally come to an end. Food delivery giant DoorDash has been caught red-handed
In a victory for labor rights, the food delivery app DoorDash has been ordered to pay nearly $17 million for secretly using customer tips to subsidize the wages of its delivery workers in New York, instead of allowing them to keep their tips on top of their guaranteed wages.
DoorDash will pay nearly $17 million in a settlement after the food delivery platform used customer tips to subsidize the wages of New York delivery workers.
The payments, part of a settlement with the New York attorney general’s office over a practice that ended in 2019, will return as much as $14,000 to some workers.
An investigation found the firm used customer tips to subsidize delivery workers’ wages between 2017 and 2019. More than 60,000 may be eligible for the payout.
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