AdamCrock
Polish Pirate
I need pizza now ..............
I think you are getting shafted. Time to look into getting a different job.
I still do not think that a higher minimum wage is good for the economy. As you posted, it was a good learning experience and helped you move on to something better. A pizza delivery job is for teenagers doing part time work, it should not be your career. Anyway Amazon is showing the future of delivery by using drones. Prepare to be replaced with robots.
I learned something today. Thanks for posting.
The only time I don't tip a food delivery person is if the service has been atrocious. As in this one guy kept insisting he was standing outside my house that was a actually 2 blocks away and I'd made it clear to the person taking my order at the restaurant that I lived in an apartment building.
I realize there may have been miscommunication between the restaurant and the driver, but dammit, when somebody tells you where they live, you should believe them!
I tip even when I'm broke. Thanks for helping me know that's justified.
How do you tip if you have no money (having presumably spent it all on the pizza+assorted delivery charges plus tax)?
This really is utterly obscene.
I think you fail to grasp the situation here. John Schnatter needs your money so he can create more jobs and expand his great american business. Now that's the american dream! It's a real tribute to America, to entrepreneurship guys.
If you can't afford a tip at all, you don't have enough money to order pizza in the first place.
Even with the minimum-wage laws it still seems they flagrantly skirt the rules.
You probably shouldn't be eating out or ordering food if you have no money is probably the best solution to this.
I think you are getting shafted. Time to look into getting a different job
I still do not think that a higher minimum wage is good for the economy.
As you posted, it was a good learning experience and helped you move on to something better. A pizza delivery job is for teenagers doing part time work,
it should not be your career.
Do you think minimum wage workers will be helped when their hours all get cut to 29 or less to avoid triggering expensive health insurance?
A few thoughts:
* Are there any unions right now in the US that represent primarily a part time work force?
* Do you have any idea of the % of food delivery drivers that work full time? My gut is that the vast majority of this workforce is PT, compared to others who work in kitchens. When I delivered pizza (which was, admittedly enough, like 8 years ago), I know we wouldn't hire anybody full time.
*Paying by miles rather than a flat fee sounds like a royal outrage, and given the damage that will do to your car, you'd probably be better off straight up going on unemployment rather than working there, or taking *literally* any other job.
*Why the heck are you still delivering pizza after a decade?
From the first post:
Actually, in a lot of states (including labor-friendly Illinois), they can legally terminate you for no reason at all.
Why do people still believe the budget was legitimately balanced? It was done so by taking money from off-budget items. Tell me if that sounds like balancing to you.
I also think the question here is why are people tipping less?
I feel bad for you and your situation; I've been in bad financial straits before(my family filed bankruptcy at one point). But what, precisely, makes you think government can make businesses "strictly" adhere to a minimum wage law?
Why haven't they been doing that from the beginning? Is the legislation going to try and cover every possible end-around?
The one place I'll sympathize is the people who just bluntly tell people "GET A BETTER JOB"
Universal healthcare. Boom. Done.
Because minimum wage laws allow businesses to incorporate expected tips into worker compensation. It's why gratuity-based professions such as pizza delivery and waiter/ress get so consistently shafted and waiter/resses get so chippy about their tips. Possible government solutions: prohibit businesses from incorporating expected tips into their payroll. Require a fixed gratuity to be automatically incorporated into a customer's bill, as it is in most of the rest of the world.
Anyone who can use the word "fungible" in a sentence, and make sense, is probably underemployed delivering pizzas.
I was a pizza delivery driver in 1991. I was paid $4.25 an hour, plus $.50 per delivery, plus tips. My rent was $150 a month and my other expenses were low so I lived pretty well. What we have seen from then until now is the constant erosion of the living standards of the bottom half to two thirds of American society in the name of enriching those who were already comfortable. Many factors have gone into bringing us to this situation, but ultimately this is what happens when you have a government that governs in the interest of Wall Street and ignores the interests of the rest of society. Without change, revolution will come, in time.
The guy's video-game forum username is about his identity as a pizza delivery man, so we can assume it's no mere job switch. That dude has educated us about pizza delivery in his multiple threads in a way that taught me a lot about a lot of things. When someone's in their zone they're in their zone.
I'd much rather have an experienced driver delivering my pizzas than teenagers. Fewer people die this way.
That's disgusting. I feel sory for you.
Seems some governments forgot that raising workers' wages actually increases consumption too.
We are talking about a pizza delivery job not being a pathway to financial success and many of you appear to believe that it should be. If you make their pay $15 per hour, who is going to want to pay an extra $5 or $10 per pizza just for the delivery?
Yeah, I almost always tip decently(usually 20% unless the service was just horrible). A huge percentage of the service problems actually originate from people in the kitchen, e.g. the order was written down properly but the kitchen messed it up. That being said, there is no way in helllllllll you are mandating that I tip bad servers a certain percentage.
As an aside, am I the only one who think it's obnoxious for there to be tip jars/a "tip" section on the receipt at carry-out places? I have no problem tipping delivery people and waiters, but I had to get in my car and drive to go get my pizza or whatever. All you did was turn around and get it out of the oven thing. There's not even a dine-in area so it's not like I took them away from customers. I don't get it.
The economy sucks and I wouldn't belittle anyone for the job they take. That being said, am I to understand the OP has been at that job continuously since 2004, nearly a decade? That kind of job was never meant to be held that long.
There's a difference between needing a gap job during tough times, as many people are doing right now, and holding it for 9 years.
But what is a living wage? A living wage for a full time student working part time is different than the couple with the mortgage, dog, and 2.2 kids.
The fact of the matter is that some jobs will always pay more than others. Always have, always will. There's no reason to expect anything different.
Now maybe minimum wage should be raised, but there will always be lower paying jobs that, quite frankly, won't pay enough for certain families to make ends meet. I don't expect that to change until we evolve into a Star Trek society where currency no longer exists.
The embellishments concerning the dope smoking and basement dwelling were added by myself for humor.
They might or not be true. Whenever I think of an adult delivering pizza for a living it makes me think of Talladega Nights when Ricky Bobby is riding the bus delivering pizza.
I still do not see the salt mine style slavery that is endured by pizza delivery. As I said in an earlier post it sounds like it is not worth the pay. In that case you should go somewhere else.
So dissenting opinions are deemed to be worthless? I did not realize that this was a free speech zone on a college campus![]()
So nobody would be laid off because of higher wages being imposed on all businesses?
Higher mandated wages would not hurt any small business in America?
I just do not accept that every job out there in existence is one that is supposed to be a living wage for someone on their own or for their family.
(cue "it is the business's fault for being a crappy business")
To the OP:
While I'm by no means condoning or supporting the majority of what you describe, I must admit that I find it an odd complaint to make when you say that your employer makes more money out of you than they pay back to you in wages, or that they are employing you at a negative cost, or however else you phrased it. Isn't this essentially true for any employee of any profit-making business anywhere in the world? Isn't the whole point of hiring an employee that they will generate revenue for your company above and beyond the cost of their remuneration? If that weren't true then they would be running at a loss... I don't understand how you have a problem with this.
Sure, I get that you have a problem that they're screwing you out of the money you used to get and making it hard for you to survive on that wage, but it also seems like you just have a general problem with the principle of a company making a profit out of its employees, when that's surely just a given?
So, firstly, to those whose instincts are the same as mine with regards to minimum wage (that it decreases employment). It's actually been a fairly big deal in right-wing economics, because the theory is astoundingly intuitive ... and the data just didn't agree. Time after time, people scratch their heads, because it just didn't work out as expected. Honestly, blew me away too. I am entirely sure I've posted on CFC regarding minimum wage causing unemployment.
Well, keep in mind that the employers are also getting increased business due to having a delivery service. So, they get the profits on the pizzas they wouldn't otherwise have sold. ATPG is just pointing out how the 'boss' has changed the system ("innnovation") to just get more money while ATPG gets less. So, what used to be a mutually beneficial arrangement has been changed just to shift the take-in ratios.
The average fast food worker is aged 36 in America and has worked only in the service industry. Given that the majority are middle aged the idea that its job of teenagers as a gateway into jobs no longer holds true and unrealistic.
"Why don't these lazy people just work? McJobs is always hiring!"
"Pizza delivery is for teenagers doing part-time work, it should not be your career."
Correct. If they want to stay in business serving, say, 250 customers a day, laying off half their crew will result in: upset customers and loss of revenue.
What then?
Raise the cost of food by about 3-4 percent, and pay the employees what they're worth, like they always do in this situation, and life.... goes........ on.
Fraid lower taxes and stagnating wages aren't helping get people employed to begin with, friend. That's the trickle-down lie that has been exposed through actual real-world practice.
It would hurt the ones who are too dumb to raise the price of pizza from 10 dollars to 10.50.
Others will adapt, and for the very first time in decades, you might pay over 10 bucks for a pizza.
Inflation! It is a thing! Pretending it doesn't exist is bad!
I guarantee you the same number of people were employed per store when the minimum wage for drivers was the actual minimum wage, and not below it.
So yes, nobody would be laid off. We're still hiring, constantly, because we cannot keep people.
We have to give people 40+ hours a week because we are CONSTANTLY UNDERSTAFFED.
No one, I repeat, no one is getting laid off due to higher wages.
Again, we're not even TALKING ABOUT higher wages. We're talking about restoring our wages to the minimum it was in previous years, when the employer was still quite profitable.
It is a fantasy that this discussion was ever about 15 dollars an hour or some ludicrous amount for a delivery driver.
No one's even talking about higher than minimum wage. We're asking for the minimum.
Oooh, minimum. Who could possibly afford the bare minimum? That's way too much to expect from a business who used to pay that much.
That is.... quite telling.
Who, pray tell, do you believe is in the position of wanting a job that pays less than what it takes to live, and is also in the position of being independently wealthy enough to not need the income?
I realize this may lead to another reflexive "why that job is not a real job, it's for kids to do after school and yadda yadda yadda"
Yes, kids in grade school should be out delivering pizzas at 1am to shady neighborhoods.
I hate to harp on this point, but I notice there are two kinds of posters in this thread- ones who suggest real world solutions to real world problems, and others, who simply deny what is real and live in a world of this is how it should be, if everything were perfect and how I imagine it.
Pizza delivery is not a paper route.
Once you accept this, I'll listen to what else you have to say, because it will begin making sense.
No, they're being a profitable business.
However, in a society, we have a duty to people besides those who own businesses.
Once we accept that premise, we can have a dialogue.
I will offer a caveat- most of my customers tip nothing.
Still, they're just fancy cheese on toast, aren't they?!
I confess I've never had a pizza delivered to me.
Every job, no matter what, should be able to sustain a human being in their current environment in a manner that doesn't require debating with yourself if you'd like electricity, food, or gasoline this month.
So, firstly, to those whose instincts are the same as mine with regards to minimum wage (that it decreases employment). It's actually been a fairly big deal in right-wing economics, because the theory is astoundingly intuitive ... and the data just didn't agree. Time after time, people scratch their heads, because it just didn't work out as expected. Honestly, blew me away too. I am entirely sure I've posted on CFC regarding minimum wage causing unemployment.