Tuesday, January 2, 2024

2024 brings new gig worker protections

Also today: The woman hoping to change the face of American design, and Google's cycling map woes.

As the share of gig workers in the US grows, new protections going into effect in several cities will provide a test case for labor rights in a burgeoning sector of app-based work. New York City and Seattle recently implemented laws intended to bring delivery drivers up to minimum wage. They require companies like Uber and Doordash to compensate workers on a time and distance basis or at a rate every time they're offered a job, instead of paying them per trip.

Other cities considering similar protections will be watching as officials work to enforce the new rules amid pushback from industry players. Read more from Fola Akinnibi today on CityLab: Gig Worker Protections Find Testing Ground in NYC, Seattle

— Guillermo Molero

More on CityLab

The Black Woman Architect Who Hopes to Change the Face of Design in America 
The new president of the American Institute of Architects, Kimberly Dowdell, says that when it comes to improving cities, "architects can see the future."

When Will Google Fix Maps for Cyclists? 
The tech giant's new partnership in London seeks to improve a service criticized for recommending dangerous journeys. But riders so far aren't convinced.

The Water Trade Is Booming — and Sucking Australia Dry
On the world's driest inhabited continent, water is making a few big investors very rich.

The year of Sphere

$2.3 billion
The price tag for Sphere, Las Vegas's newest and most expensive entertainment venue. Read why CityLab's Kriston Capps has crowned it  2023's greatest architectural spectacle — for better or worse.

What we're reading

  • How to make room for a million New Yorkers (The New York Times)
  • 'Era of gigantism is over': why Paris chose banlieu for its Olympic Village (The Guardian)
  • Why 2023 was the year of the e-bike and not the self-driving car (Fast Company)
  • From Anchorage to Austin, US cities opt to ditch their off-street parking minimums (NPR
  • 'Doom loop' professor says things are actually looking up for New York City (Gothamist)

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