You are here: Home » Companies » News
Maruti Suzuki total wholesales up 5% in February at 172,321 units
icon-arrow-left
Business Standard

Delivery boys being harassed in Delhi: Swiggy, Zomato raises concern

Online food delivery platform Swiggy said the recent changes in regulations on bike taxi services in Delhi have caused confusion and disruption to their services, creating panic among executives

Topics
Swiggy | Zomato | Bike Taxi

IANS  |  New Delhi 



Swiggy

Online food delivery platforms on Wednesday said the recent changes in regulations on services in Delhi have caused confusion and disruption to their services, creating panic among their delivery executives.

A spokesperson told IANS that their delivery executives are being wrongly issued challans despite the notification being applicable only to service providers.

"Some challans that have been issued to our delivery executives are in excess of Rs 15,000," said the company spokesperson.

This has "created fear and apprehension among our delivery executives", who are crucial in ensuring that our customers receive their orders on time.

A spokesperson told IANS that "while the notice is only for passenger vehicles, there is some misinterpretation on the ground".

In a letter sent to the Delhi government's transport department and seen by IANS, Dinker Vashisht, Group Vice President, Public Policy, Regulatory and Sustainability at Swiggy, wrote that the directions have been misinterpreted by Regional Transport Office (RTO) officials, who have started issuing challans to delivery partners.

"This has led to disruption of services, and confusion among the delivery partners, who are now apprehensive of providing their service with a fear of being penalised and harassed while on duty," Vashisht said, urging the to intervene and give an assurance to delivery partners and last-mile delivery aggregators.

"Ensuring that our delivery executives can operate smoothly and serve our customers without any interruptions is our top priority," said the company.

Last week, ride-hailing major Uber asked the to create a level-playing field for two-wheeler mobility rides for commuters.

The company said that different electrification mandates for ridesharing and delivery sectors, not only leads to inequitable sharing of responsibility but "seriously disadvantages the entire industry".

Carrying passengers on bike taxis bearing private registration numbers has been made a punishable offence and may attract fines up to Rs 10,000, according to a circular issued by the Transport Department of .

Delhi uses two-wheelers across ridesharing platforms, accounting for estimated 20 lakh trips every month.

In 2022, over 19 lakh trips took place to and from metro stations in NCR on Uber Moto, underscoring the need-gap bike taxis to fill in solving the last-mile commute.

--IANS

na/ksk/

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)


Subscribe to Business Standard Premium

Exclusive Stories, Curated Newsletters, 26 years of Archives, E-paper, and more!

Insightful news, sharp views, newsletters, e-paper, and more! Unlock incisive commentary only on Business Standard.

Download the Business Standard App for latest Business News and Market News .

First Published: Wed, March 01 2023. 14:36 IST

RECOMMENDED FOR YOU

.