I started delivering food in Seattle a few years ago because it gave me flexibility. I could work around school, family responsibilities, and other jobs. I could choose when to log on, where to work, and how long to stay out. Like many delivery drivers, it’s not my full-time job — I was looking for control over my time and a reliable way to earn a little extra income. Two years after Seattle passed its delivery pay law, that flexibility — and that reliability — is disappearing. When the city passed the App-Based Worker Minimum Payment Ordinance, the idea sounded good: guarantee delivery drivers a higher minimum pay rate. I support fair pay. Drivers deserve protections, and no one should be underpaid for their work. But what the law didn’t fully account for is how delivery actually works — and how higher costs would change customer behavior. Since the law took effect, the biggest change I’ve noticed isn’t higher pay. It’s fewer orders. These days, I spend much more time sitting in my car waiting for offers. Across Seattle, drivers are now waiting nearly FIVE times longer than they did in September 2023, before the standard went into effect. Dashers like me are now forced to wait an average of 20 minutes between offers. That’s not because we’re working less — it’s because the work just isn’t there. Those waiting periods aren’t paid. It’s time I’m not earning, even though I’m available and ready to work. When orders finally do come in, they’re often spaced so far apart that it’s hard to make a shift worthwhile. Even with higher per-delivery pay requirements, my weekly earnings are down. With fewer deliveries available, I’m completing fewer orders per shift. That’s less money in my pocket for groceries, rent, childcare, and all the other things I rely on these deliveries to cover. In fact, a new study from the National Bureau of Economic Research in December confirmed that for highlight active drivers like me, we’re getting fewer opportunities to dash, which, combined with lower tips, has completely offset the higher base pay designated by the policy, and resulted in zero effect on monthly earnings. Zero! These economists used impartial data to prove that the delivery fees destroyed ‘elastic demand’ AND delivery work in Seattle. If our elected officials had talked to us, they would have understood better that delivery depends on balance. Customers need prices they can afford. Restaurants need enough volume to stay profitable. Drivers need steady demand to earn consistently. When one part of that system gets pushed too far out of balance, everything else suffers. Right now, Seattle has the highest delivery fees in the country — more than twice what customers pay in similar cities. That might look like protection in theory, but in practice, it’s driving demand away. A higher rate doesn’t help my fellow delivery drivers or me if there are no orders attached to it. What does this mean for us in the long term? Fewer orders mean fewer opportunities to earn. It means less flexibility, more uncertainty, and more unpaid time between deliveries. That’s not what most of us signed up for. I don’t want to go back to a system where drivers are underpaid or taken advantage of. But I also don’t want policies that sound good to voters but make it harder to earn in real life. We shouldn’t have to choose between fair pay and functional work. Two years in, it’s time for Seattle leaders to look honestly at the results. If the goal was to help drivers, restaurants, and communities, the current approach isn’t getting us there. We need to reform the delivery pay policy so that it protects drivers without pushing customers away and shrinking the work we depend on. I’m proud of the work I do. I want to keep delivering in Seattle. But that’s only possible if the system actually works — not just on paper, but on the street, where drivers like me are waiting for the next order that may or may not come. Gary Lardizabal is a Seattle-based app delivery driver. He testified at Seattle City Council meetings against Seattle’s App-Based Worker Minimum Payment Ordinance on several occasions.

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The Center Square
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I started delivering food in Seattle a few years ago because it gave me flexibility. I could work around school, family responsibilities, and other jobs. I could choose when to log on, where to work, and how long to stay out. Like many delivery drivers, it’s not my full-time job — I was looking for control over my time and a reliable way to earn a little extra income. Two years after Seattle passed its delivery pay law, that flexibility — and that reliability — is disappearing. When the city passed the App-Based Worker Minimum Payment Ordinance, the idea sounded good: guarantee delivery drivers a higher minimum pay rate. I support fair pay. Drivers deserve protections, and no one should be underpaid for their work. But what the law didn’t fully account for is how delivery actually works — and how higher costs would change customer behavior. Since the law took effect, the biggest change I’ve noticed isn’t higher pay. It’s fewer orders. These days, I spend much more time sitting in my car waiting for offers. Across Seattle, drivers are now waiting nearly FIVE times longer than they did in September 2023, before the standard went into effect. Dashers like me are now forced to wait an average of 20 minutes between offers. That’s not because we’re working less — it’s because the work just isn’t there. Those waiting periods aren’t paid. It’s time I’m not earning, even though I’m available and ready to work. When orders finally do come in, they’re often spaced so far apart that it’s hard to make a shift worthwhile. Even with higher per-delivery pay requirements, my weekly earnings are down. With fewer deliveries available, I’m completing fewer orders per shift. That’s less money in my pocket for groceries, rent, childcare, and all the other things I rely on these deliveries to cover. In fact, a new study from the National Bureau of Economic Research in December confirmed that for highlight active drivers like me, we’re getting fewer opportunities to dash, which, combined with lower tips, has completely offset the higher base pay designated by the policy, and resulted in zero effect on monthly earnings. Zero! These economists used impartial data to prove that the delivery fees destroyed ‘elastic demand’ AND delivery work in Seattle. If our elected officials had talked to us, they would have understood better that delivery depends on balance. Customers need prices they can afford. Restaurants need enough volume to stay profitable. Drivers need steady demand to earn consistently. When one part of that system gets pushed too far out of balance, everything else suffers. Right now, Seattle has the highest delivery fees in the country — more than twice what customers pay in similar cities. That might look like protection in theory, but in practice, it’s driving demand away. A higher rate doesn’t help my fellow delivery drivers or me if there are no orders attached to it. What does this mean for us in the long term? Fewer orders mean fewer opportunities to earn. It means less flexibility, more uncertainty, and more unpaid time between deliveries. That’s not what most of us signed up for. I don’t want to go back to a system where drivers are underpaid or taken advantage of. But I also don’t want policies that sound good to voters but make it harder to earn in real life. We shouldn’t have to choose between fair pay and functional work. Two years in, it’s time for Seattle leaders to look honestly at the results. If the goal was to help drivers, restaurants, and communities, the current approach isn’t getting us there. We need to reform the delivery pay policy so that it protects drivers without pushing customers away and shrinking the work we depend on. I’m proud of the work I do. I want to keep delivering in Seattle. But that’s only possible if the system actually works — not just on paper, but on the street, where drivers like me are waiting for the next order that may or may not come. Gary Lardizabal is a Seattle-based app delivery driver. He testified at Seattle City Council meetings against Seattle’s App-Based Worker Minimum Payment Ordinance on several occasions.

5 minutes

Pennsylvania Capital-Star
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Legislation that would mandate a universal bell-to-bell cell phone ban in public and private schools across the commonwealth now heads to the House after getting the nod from senators. A bipartisan group of senators petitioned their colleagues Wednesday to move the proposal, noting that Gov. Josh Shapiro has already endorsed the idea.  “We are spending […]

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Pennsylvania Capital-Star
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Legislation that would mandate a universal bell-to-bell cell phone ban in public and private schools across the commonwealth now heads to the House after getting the nod from senators. A bipartisan group of senators petitioned their colleagues Wednesday to move the proposal, noting that Gov. Josh Shapiro has already endorsed the idea.  “We are spending […]

TOPEKA — Rep. Samantha Poetter Parshall explained to House members Wednesday that she was voting against a program that delivers tax credits to aviation companies and their employees because it was the state’s latest example of handing cash to “mega-corporations” while ignoring the tax burden on everyone else. Poetter Parshall, a Paola Republican, said the $8.2 […]

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Kansas Reflector
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TOPEKA — Rep. Samantha Poetter Parshall explained to House members Wednesday that she was voting against a program that delivers tax credits to aviation companies and their employees because it was the state’s latest example of handing cash to “mega-corporations” while ignoring the tax burden on everyone else. Poetter Parshall, a Paola Republican, said the $8.2 […]

10 minutes

Oregon Capital Chronicle
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The Oregon Public Employees Retirement System is set to take another massive bite out of public budgets starting in the 2027-29 budget cycle.

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Oregon Capital Chronicle
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The Oregon Public Employees Retirement System is set to take another massive bite out of public budgets starting in the 2027-29 budget cycle.

Gov. Abigail Spanberger has formally ended an agreement with the U.S. Customs and Immigration Enforcement that had allowed Virginia State Police troopers and Virginia Department of Corrections officers to assist ICE.  The agreement — which stems from Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s administration —  had effectively placed state law enforcement under federal control and supervision to conduct […]

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Virginia Mercury
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Gov. Abigail Spanberger has formally ended an agreement with the U.S. Customs and Immigration Enforcement that had allowed Virginia State Police troopers and Virginia Department of Corrections officers to assist ICE.  The agreement — which stems from Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s administration —  had effectively placed state law enforcement under federal control and supervision to conduct […]

12 minutes

Rhode Island Current
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WASHINGTON — The top two Democrats in Congress on Wednesday outlined their proposal for restrictions on immigration enforcement, including body cameras and a ban on masks, though they had no details to share about when actual negotiations would begin. Lawmakers from both political parties have less than two weeks to find a solution before the […]

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Rhode Island Current
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WASHINGTON — The top two Democrats in Congress on Wednesday outlined their proposal for restrictions on immigration enforcement, including body cameras and a ban on masks, though they had no details to share about when actual negotiations would begin. Lawmakers from both political parties have less than two weeks to find a solution before the […]

Президент Украины Владимир Зеленский заявил в интервью France 2, что потери Вооруженных сил Украины в войне превышают 55 тысяч человек.

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Медуза
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Президент Украины Владимир Зеленский заявил в интервью France 2, что потери Вооруженных сил Украины в войне превышают 55 тысяч человек.

The judiciary committee of the Kansas Senate is studying a bill forbidding judges to allow some convicted felons to remain free on bond pending sentencing.

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Kansas Reflector
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The judiciary committee of the Kansas Senate is studying a bill forbidding judges to allow some convicted felons to remain free on bond pending sentencing.

The campaign behind an initiative to roll back Maine’s inclusive policies for transgender athletes said on Monday it has enough signatures to appear on the November ballot. In a press conference at the State House, the group announced that it collected over 82,000 signatures from Maine voters over the past few months — more than […]

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Source NM
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The campaign behind an initiative to roll back Maine’s inclusive policies for transgender athletes said on Monday it has enough signatures to appear on the November ballot. In a press conference at the State House, the group announced that it collected over 82,000 signatures from Maine voters over the past few months — more than […]

Pennsylvania’s status as a leading energy producer and hub for technological innovation positions it to play a leading role in the AI race, but it must do so in a way that puts its people first, Gov. Josh Shapiro said in his budget address Tuesday. Shapiro, who is running for reelection, touted Amazon’s selection last […]

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Source NM
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Pennsylvania’s status as a leading energy producer and hub for technological innovation positions it to play a leading role in the AI race, but it must do so in a way that puts its people first, Gov. Josh Shapiro said in his budget address Tuesday. Shapiro, who is running for reelection, touted Amazon’s selection last […]

How ICE is watching you
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21 minutes

Source NM
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A Border Patrol agent warned Nicole Cleland last month that she’d be arrested if she were again discovered following and observing federal officers.  Three days later, the 56-year-old Richfield resident received an email saying her expedited airport security screening privileges had been revoked. Cleland is a frequent traveler and had held Global Entry and TSA […]

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Source NM
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A Border Patrol agent warned Nicole Cleland last month that she’d be arrested if she were again discovered following and observing federal officers.  Three days later, the 56-year-old Richfield resident received an email saying her expedited airport security screening privileges had been revoked. Cleland is a frequent traveler and had held Global Entry and TSA […]

Diego González Rivas lidera en Afganistán una misión quirúrgica y formativa que refuerza la cirugía avanzada y la capacitación médica local.

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Mundiario
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Diego González Rivas lidera en Afganistán una misión quirúrgica y formativa que refuerza la cirugía avanzada y la capacitación médica local.

25 minutes

Source NM
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About 20,000 immigrants in New Mexico are projected to lose federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits this year.

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Source NM
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About 20,000 immigrants in New Mexico are projected to lose federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits this year.

Oposição deve trabalhar para instalação da CPI na Casa CLDF deve focar no caso Master-BRB no primeiro semestre, diz vice-presidente Ricardo Vale apareceu primeiro no Brasil de Fato.

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Brasil de Fato
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Oposição deve trabalhar para instalação da CPI na Casa CLDF deve focar no caso Master-BRB no primeiro semestre, diz vice-presidente Ricardo Vale apareceu primeiro no Brasil de Fato.

29 minutes

Times of San Diego
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It’s the least played of Mahler’s ten symphonies, and an uncompromising test for conductor Rafael Payare and the orchestra.

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Times of San Diego
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It’s the least played of Mahler’s ten symphonies, and an uncompromising test for conductor Rafael Payare and the orchestra.

30 minutes

New Hampshire Bulletin
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WASHINGTON — The top two Democrats in Congress on Wednesday outlined their proposal for restrictions on immigration enforcement, including body cameras and a ban on masks, though they had no details to share about when actual negotiations would begin. Lawmakers from both political parties have less than two weeks to find a solution before the […]

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New Hampshire Bulletin
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WASHINGTON — The top two Democrats in Congress on Wednesday outlined their proposal for restrictions on immigration enforcement, including body cameras and a ban on masks, though they had no details to share about when actual negotiations would begin. Lawmakers from both political parties have less than two weeks to find a solution before the […]

L.A. politicians say Wasserman's leadership is a distraction after newly released emails between him and convicted sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell.

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LAist
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L.A. politicians say Wasserman's leadership is a distraction after newly released emails between him and convicted sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell.

A lawyer who emailed Jeffrey Epstein on the legality of transporting minors across state lines for sex remains on the board of a group focused on combating antisemitism in higher education, months after his guidance to Epstein became public. Mitchell Webber is on the board of the Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law and... The post Antisemitism group keeps board member who emailed Epstein on the legality of transporting minors for sex appeared first on The Forward.

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The Forward
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A lawyer who emailed Jeffrey Epstein on the legality of transporting minors across state lines for sex remains on the board of a group focused on combating antisemitism in higher education, months after his guidance to Epstein became public. Mitchell Webber is on the board of the Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law and... The post Antisemitism group keeps board member who emailed Epstein on the legality of transporting minors for sex appeared first on The Forward.

Após igualar o feito do filme Cidade de Deus e ser indicado a quatro Oscars, o filme O Agente Secreto continua fidelizando o público e levando milhares de brasileiros às salas de cinema. Depois do anúncio da Academia de Artes e Ciências Cinematográficas, na quinta-feira (22), a bilheteria do longa-metragem de Kleber Mendonça Filho superou […] MG é o 3º estado que mais foi aos cinemas assistir O Agente Secreto; 116 mil mineiros já viram  apareceu primeiro no Brasil de Fato.

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Brasil de Fato
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Após igualar o feito do filme Cidade de Deus e ser indicado a quatro Oscars, o filme O Agente Secreto continua fidelizando o público e levando milhares de brasileiros às salas de cinema. Depois do anúncio da Academia de Artes e Ciências Cinematográficas, na quinta-feira (22), a bilheteria do longa-metragem de Kleber Mendonça Filho superou […] MG é o 3º estado que mais foi aos cinemas assistir O Agente Secreto; 116 mil mineiros já viram  apareceu primeiro no Brasil de Fato.

33 minutes

Daily Montanan
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WASHINGTON — The top two Democrats in Congress on Wednesday outlined their proposal for restrictions on immigration enforcement, including body cameras and a ban on masks, though they had no details to share about when actual negotiations would begin. Lawmakers from both political parties have less than two weeks to find a solution before the […]

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Daily Montanan
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WASHINGTON — The top two Democrats in Congress on Wednesday outlined their proposal for restrictions on immigration enforcement, including body cameras and a ban on masks, though they had no details to share about when actual negotiations would begin. Lawmakers from both political parties have less than two weeks to find a solution before the […]