Money & The Economy

Blue City’s Plan To Pay DoorDashers More Runs Into Basic Law Of Economics

A Seattle City ordinance helped to increase the wages of app-based gig workers for the first few months it went into effect but now the workers are faced with a staggering halt to their earnings.

The ordinance, which went into effect 2024, increased gig worker’s minimum wage payment and compensation for time spent in traffic and distance traveled. Workers saw a rise in pay for the first few months but they soon saw a steep decline in their wages when customers were faced with increased fees, according to KUOW NPR.

Michael Lowe, a worker for DoorDash, got paid $58 for two deliveries that took an hour to complete due to traffic and said he would have been paid $17 for those same orders before the ordinance, the outlet reported. Lowe said the orders coming from customers began to slow down after a few months, leading to some workers being logged on for hours without seeing a single order come through.

Uttam Mukherjee, a co-owner to an Indian restaurant in Seattle, estimated his business declined nearly 50% as a result of the ordinance causing new fees to be added to delivery orders, according to KUOW NPR. Mukherjee said the new fees would make a $12-15 meal from his restaurant increase to $35-40 when ordering through an app like DoorDash.

DoorDash published a report tracking order sales from January 2023 to January 2025 across Denver, Portland, Seattle, and San Francisco. The report claimed monthly order sales per stores increased 20% in Denver, 40% in Portland, and 30% San Francisco but only 5% in Seattle.

The DoorDash report said Seattle customers paid 3.5 times the average order fee than customers across Denver, San Francisco and Portland.

The Intentionalist, a Seattle based guide to small businesses, conducted a survey late 2025 that showed a wide range of local businesses struggled financially more than they did during the COVID-19 pandemic. Nearly 71.4% of surveyed businesses said foot traffic is down from the previous year, 63% reported a decline in business, and around 80% operate under $1 million in annual revenue according to the survey.

Content created by The Daily Caller News Foundation is available without charge to any eligible news publisher that can provide a large audience. For licensing opportunities of our original content, please contact licensing@dailycallernewsfoundation.org

Sean Hustedde

Share
Published by
Sean Hustedde

Recent Posts

Big Tech And Automakers’ Dangerous Ploy To Kill AM Radio

The march of time and technology has taken its toll on Americans’ unity. Big Tech…

2 hours ago

Ghislaine Maxwell Could End Up Kissing Her American Citizenship Goodbye

Ghislaine Maxwell’s answers on a U.S. citizenship form could come back to haunt her. The…

2 hours ago

An Elderly Driver Killed A Family Of Four — What Happened Next Is Pure San Francisco

An elderly woman will likely face only probation and keep her license after allegedly killing…

3 hours ago

AOC Fails Basic Geography Lesson

Democratic New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez incorrectly stated on Sunday that Venezuela is “below the…

3 hours ago

Little Marco is All Grown Up

I have been a fan and supporter of Marco Rubio since he threw his hat…

3 hours ago

How I Got My Kids to Stop Whining in Only 3 Days

For this mother of two young, world-class whiners, the techniques described in the booklet seemed…

3 hours ago