
When you鈥檙e a gig worker during a global pandemic and your boss is an app
Gig work is transforming our global economy and public health as workers weigh risks every day in precarious, low-wage jobs to deliver us food and parcels
Gig work is transforming our global economy and public health as workers weigh risks every day in precarious, low-wage jobs to deliver us food and parcels
By Beth Gallagher University RelationsEllen MacEachen
Professor, Faculty of Health
> School of Public Health and Health Systems
When the pandemic hit and workers retreated to the safety of their homes, Ellen MacEachen knew the risks of being infected with COVID-19 and transmitting it to others would be high for the gig workers delivering our food and parcels and for the drivers helping us avoid public transportation.
鈥淭here are some interesting opportunities out there and it all works great until you have an illness or an injury or a pandemic,鈥 says MacEachen, a professor in 蓝莓视频鈥檚 School of Public Health and Health Systems. 鈥淎ll of a sudden, you start to appreciate even more strongly the work and health protection differences between a gig and a more traditional job.鈥
A few months after Canada went into lockdown, MacEachen and her research teams began exploring how to reduce the risk of gig workers getting and transmitting the coronavirus, and how sick leave policies and practices can protect workers and the community. MacEachen is hoping the research will help protect gig workers and others in low-income, precarious jobs who are helping to keep the rest of us safe in our homes.
鈥淲e want to know what risks these workers take when they don鈥檛 have paid sick leave and what are the consequences for public health,鈥 MacEachen says.
Through in-depth interviews, her research teams are hearing from personal shoppers who are delivering groceries to people with COVID-19 who refuse to wear masks. They may refuse to finish a grocery order because a store employee is coughing, but that work refusal increases their 鈥渃ancellation rate,鈥 which could get them kicked off the app for which they work.
MacEachen鈥檚 research teams are finding there are unique dilemmas for workers employed through app-mediated online platforms such as Uber Eats, Amazon Flex and Lyft. While each app works differently, gig workers can wake up one morning to discover they鈥檝e been kicked off the app by an algorithm because their customer score went too low. It鈥檚 why drivers are anxious about asking passengers to wear a mask and risk a poor review.
鈥淭hey are very insecure workers and anxious about wanting to maintain their jobs,鈥 MacEachen says. 鈥淭hey don鈥檛 really have a manager. These companies see themselves as technological interfaces so workers don鈥檛 really have a manager to go to.鈥
There are ride-hail drivers, says MacEachen, who buy disposable masks for passengers with their own money. While some drivers may worry about getting infected by passengers, they continue to work and often can鈥檛 even afford to take time away from driving to get tested for COVID-19. 鈥淭hey may say, 鈥業 have a sore throat but I need to pay the rent, so I鈥檓 going to work,鈥欌 MacEachen says.
Before the pandemic, MacEachen says there had already been a significant shift around the world and in Canada, with about 30 per cent of workers are engaged in low-wage, temporary work. This global shift has impacts that go beyond the health and wellness of individual workers.
鈥淭hese gig firms don鈥檛 pay employment insurance. They don鈥檛 pay into a pension plan. They don鈥檛 pay payroll taxes,鈥 MacEachen says. 鈥淭hey don鈥檛 contribute to our national well-being in the same way that other employers do 鈥 so they are free riders in a way.鈥
The costs, however, impact all Canadians: 鈥淚f these workers do get ill, if they can afford to be ill, instead of a workers compensation claim 鈥 it will be a hospital visit,鈥 MacEachen says. 鈥淲orkers aren鈥檛 signed up for employment insurance, so they end up on social assistance.鈥
MacEachen says the pandemic has highlighted the critical importance of supporting vulnerable workers and may force society to make changes for those who currently have almost no workplace health support or guidance. She hopes her research team鈥檚 findings will guide workplace interventions that combat misinformation and fear while reducing illness and disease transmission.
The Canadian Emergency Response Benefit (CERB) is one example of a government intervention that has supported gig workers during the pandemic. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really exciting to see this change on the part of the government, MacEachen says. 鈥淭his is the time when we are re-evaluating our society and the types of supports we want.鈥
听
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The University of 蓝莓视频 acknowledges that much of our work takes place on the traditional territory of the Neutral, Anishinaabeg, and Haudenosaunee peoples. Our main campus is situated on the Haldimand Tract, the land granted to the Six Nations that includes six miles on each side of the Grand River. Our active work toward reconciliation takes place across our campuses through research, learning, teaching, and community building, and is co-ordinated within the Office of Indigenous Relations.