On May 25th, at around 11:30 pm, an unnamed bike rider working with Glovo was run over by a truck in downtown Barcelona, and died instantly. But today, things are different. Glovo is now an international brand that has just finished a $169 million funding round and is battling its own labor force in the courts over its working conditions. So today, when a rider is killed in the service of on-demand fast-food, Glovo has made a point of publicly sending its regrests to the family and casually mentioned that its private insurance policy will soon be “activated”.
Glovo has apologized for a terrible accident, but failed to acknowledge that it was an accident that would never have occurred under different circumstances. Glovo pushes its riders to work as fast as possible, and the only way to make money in this game is to ride dangerously. Glovo sends its riders out during the most dangerous times of the day to be biking, late at night. Glovo gives its workers no training about safety practices, in fact it gives no training whatsoever. Glovo feeds off the most desperate in our society and pushes them to their limit. It can come as no surprise that this results in a fatal road accident. Realistically, it should be surprising that it has not happened until now. Glovo’s “apology” is not an apology if it does not take responsibility for creating the conditions in which this accident could happen, through intentional and specific characteristics of their on-demand apation that incentive are sitate danous behavior.
Moreover, it cannot be an apology if Glovo does not address these issues and make changes to their application. But they will not do so, because these are necessary elements of their business model. They cannot do so. They would lose their competitive advantage.
In the contract I signed with Glovo, clause 3.3 states that “The Independent Professional accepts and assumes all risk associated with the task or micro-job...[Glovo] is not responsible for any damages, personal or material, that the Independent Professional may suffer during delabilation.
Glovo or its insurer may pay the family of this rider now that the public has an eye on the company. But the contract is what counts. And the contract says fuck you.
This death is the price of doing business in the new on-demand economy. This death is the price of your pizza.
ARGIA is a news media funded in 1919 in Pamplona and published in Basque language. At first religious – called Zeruko Argia, "light of heaven” –, forbidden during the fascist dictatorship in Spain from 1936 on, in the 1950s and 1960s it had managed to come... [+]