A few weeks ago, John Ervin regularly drove his work van around Greater Columbus to drum up business.
“I'm kind of on the fence,” he said. “I'm at over $3,000 a month in just fuel expenses. That's a lot of money.”Annicia Chase, 22, of Franklinton, started driving for the third-party meal delivery service DoorDash a year ago, firing up the company's app every time she left work at her primary job waiting tables for a Reynoldsburg restaurant.
A DoorDash spokesperson said the company offers drivers discounts on car maintenance and a 2% cutback on fuel costs for drivers who have the company’s DasherDirect card. Uber tacked a 45 cent surcharge to each meal delivery and a 55 cent surcharge to each ride, all of which goes to the driver. “Having kids and trying to find an employer that could work with the weird custody schedule I had with my oldest wasn't working out,” Saunders said.
They know we'll keep paying for our luxurious first world lifestyle until we've maxed out credit cards, title loaned our car and put a second mortgage on the house.
Even if gas prices go down they will keep the cost UP!
Oh wow it’s almost like these companies are exploiting them