11/08/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 11/08/2024 14:46
November 08, 2024
**Download a broadcast quality video file of Attorney General Raoul's remarks here.**
Chicago - Attorney General Kwame Raoul today announced a $11.25 million settlement agreement with DoorDash. If approved by a judge, the settlement will resolve allegations that the company violated the Illinois Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act by misrepresenting to customers that tipping would increase drivers' pay.
"DoorDash encouraged customers to tip as much as possible, indicating that all of their tip would go to workers," Raoul said. "Instead, DoorDash used tips to reduce the amount the company paid workers. By putting tips toward driver pay, DoorDash could get away with contributing as little as $1 toward a worker's pay and allow tips to make up the rest. This settlement ensures tips from customers end up where they were intended to go: into the pockets of delivery drivers."
Raoul's office alleges that instead of allowing drivers to keep their tips on top of whatever DoorDash would pay them, DoorDash implemented a scheme to use the customer tips toward a guaranteed pay that DoorDash promised delivery drivers. Under DoorDash's payment scheme, customer tips rarely had an impact on a driver's pay beyond reducing DoorDash's contribution to their guaranteed pay.
DoorDash ended the practice in 2019. The proposed settlement includes relief for over 79,000 workers who made deliveries in Illinois while the scheme was in place between July 2017 and September 2019. The settlement requires DoorDash to maintain a pay model that does not use consumer tips as a factor when calculating its own contributions to workers' pay. It also requires the company to make clear disclosures to both workers and customers regarding its pay model.
Assistant Attorney General Samantha Kronk and Bureau Chief Alvar Ayala handled the case for Raoul's Workplace Rights Bureau.
Attorney General Raoul's Workplace Rights Bureau protects and advances the employment rights of all Illinois residents, particularly the state's most vulnerable residents and immigrant populations. The bureau investigates and litigates cases involving serious or persistent wage law violations or other significant employment practices, and monitors and proposes legislation concerning labor and employment issues.
Attorney General Raoul encourages workers who have concerns about wage and hour violations to call his Workplace Rights Hotline at 1-844-740-5076 or visit the office's website to submit an online complaint in English or in Spanish.