
Food delivery riders and the Transport Workers Union say that proposals for new laws to target and fine them will make their work less safe and let Uber and Deliveroo off the hook.
Drivers are concerned that the NSW government聽intends to use police to target them and make their work less safe.
At a protest outside the NSW parliament on June 16, riders called for the proposals to聽be dumped and for laws to be enacted which address the real cause of the risks to safety 鈥 the lack of regulation of their work rights.
The riders held placards which read: 鈥淕ladys, No more silence. We need rights鈥; 鈥淚 support Rights4Riders鈥; and 鈥淔ighting for our rights in the on-demand economy鈥.
Transport Workers Union (TWU) assistant聽national secretary Nick McIntosh said the government had promised action over the deaths of five delivery riders over the past year but that 鈥渁 task force had found that the fault was on the drivers themselves, absolving the companies of responsibility鈥.
He said blaming the 鈥渕ost vulnerable workers for this safety crisis鈥 was wrong. 鈥淭he real problem is with the tech giants who run the food delivery industry,鈥 adding, 鈥渨e don't need more police harassment of riders but, rather, minimum conditions, better rates of pay and safety on the job.
On June 5, Minister for Better Regulation聽and Innovation, Minister for Transport and Roads Kevin Anderson announced that a 鈥渘ew penalty system鈥 to crack down on 鈥渞epeated unsafe practices鈥. The proposals 聽include food delivery riders being given police-issue identification numbers.
The聽TWU聽and riders withdrew from a taskforce into rider safety in April because of the government鈥檚 silence on riders鈥 concerns about exploitation, unrealistic time pressures and the need for minimum pay and protections.
鈥淩iders are today asking the NSW government to call off the hounds,鈥 TWU national secretary Michael Kaine told the protest. 鈥淏laming and targeting riders over the symptoms of dangerous exploitation will only exacerbate the pressures they face. Riders are speaking from experience when they say fines will force them to rush, work longer hours and ultimately take more risks.鈥
Kaine described the statistics as 鈥渁larming鈥. 鈥淭hree in every four riders are buying unsafe bikes and helmets because they can鈥檛 afford the safer alternatives. Plying riders with fines is clearly not going to solve this problem, but will certainly make it a lot worse.鈥