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05-10-2022 Agenda and PacketA.7:00 P.M. - CALL TO ORDER B.APPROVAL OF MINUTES B.1 Approve Economic Development Commission Minutes of April 12, 2022. C.DISCUSSION ITEMS C.1 Third Party Food Delivery Fees C.2 Review 2022 Work Program C.3 Business Subsidy D.GENERAL BUSINESS E.ADMINISTRATIVE PRESENTATIONS F.CORRESPONDENCE DISCUSSION G.ADJOURNMENT AGENDA CHANHASSEN ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT COMMISSION TUESDAY, MAY 10, 2022 CITY COUNCIL CHAMBERS 1 Economic Development Commission Item May 10, 2022 Subject Approve Economic Development Commission Minutes of April 12, 2022. Section APPROVAL OF MINUTES Item No: B.1 Prepared By Amy Weidman, Admin Support Specialist File No: SUMMARY BACKGROUND DISCUSSION RECOMMENDATION Staff recommends that the Economic Development Commission approve the April 12, 2022, commission minutes. ATTACHMENTS April 12, 2022 Economic Development Commission Minutes 2 CHANHASSEN ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT COMMISSION REGULAR MEETING APRIL 12, 2022 Chairman Anderson called the meeting to order at 7:00 p.m. MEMBERS PRESENT: Chair Eric Anderson, Vice Chair David Kressler, Commissioners Duke Zurek, Chris Freeman, and Stacy Goff. MEMBERS ABSENT: None. STAFF PRESENT: Bob Generous, Senior Planner, and Jean Steckling, Senior Administrative Support Specialist PUBLIC PRESENT: None. GENERAL BUSINESS: 1. ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT COMMISSION APPOINTMENTS/OATHS OF OFFICE The Commissioners raised their right hands and read the Oath of Office for the City of Chanhassen. Chair Anderson asked each Commissioner to share a bit about themselves. Duke Zurek is honored to be part of the group, he retired from Apple in January after 20 years, his family appreciates the community, and he is excited to be part of the team. Chris Freeman is the CFO of Bongards, has a lot of experience on the other side of the table and with what is needed to help development. He hopes to help lead out what is necessary to induce good companies to come into Chanhassen. Eric Anderson just retired as a real estate developer including senior living and office buildings; prior to that he started as an intern in Edina and saw them through the changeover of the gravel pits into Edinborough Park and Centennial Lakes. David Kressler was challenged by his wife to apply for a position last year on the EDC, he has lived here since 1997, and has had fun learning about the process of being a public servant. Stacy Goff has worked for the federal government for 25 years, and was on the Peace Corps in the early 1990’s where she worked on urban planning and development. She was born and raised 3 Economic Development Commission – April 12, 2022 2 in Chanhassen and recently moved back. Her husband is now on the Planning Commission and she is now on the EDC as they want to get more involved within the City. 2. ELECTION OF CHAIR & VICE CHAIR Member Kressler moved, Member Freeman seconded to nominate Eric Anderson as Chairman of the Economic Development Commission. All voted in favor and the motion carried unanimously with a vote of 5 to 0. Chair Anderson suggested Member Kressler as Vice Chairman, but as Chair, cannot make a motion. Member Freeman moved, Member Goff seconded to nominate David Kressler as Vice Chairman of the Economic Development Commission. All voted in favor and the motion carried unanimously with a vote of 5 to 0. 3. ADOPT ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT COMMISSION BYLAWS (AMENDED) Mr. Generous stated this is an annual process, noting the only change is to the time limit of the terms. The Commissioners discussed business development within the City. Mr. Generous shared some of the past and current development for the new Commissioners. Member Kressler moved, Member Zurek seconded to adopt the Economic Development Commission Bylaws (Amended). All voted in favor and the motion carried unanimously with a vote of 5 to 0. APPROVAL OF MINUTES: APPROVE ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT COMMISSION MINUTES OF MARCH 8, 2022. Member Freeman moved, Member Kressler seconded to approve the Minutes of the Economic Development Commission meeting dated March 8, 2022. All voted in favor and the motion carried unanimously with a vote of 5 to 0. ADMINISTRATIVE PRESENTATION: None. 4 Economic Development Commission – April 12, 2022 3 CORRESPONDENCE DISCUSSION: Mr. Generous shared that at the May meeting they will be discussing food delivery fees for food delivery companies. He will explore what other cities have done in regulating those and bring the information to the Commission. Commissioner Freeman’s concern with some of the delivery places is that some of the restaurants don’t even sign up for it and it can tarnish the name of the restaurant. Chair Anderson stated unfortunately it is taking many of the small businesses incomes as they are not getting the full food fee. Mr. Generous shared that the City is working on a joint meeting between the Planning Commission, EDC, and the City Council. The City is still looking at hiring an Economic Development Manager. He noted at the next meeting he hopes to bring Code amendments that are related to economic development before the Commission, one of which is the sign ordinance. ADJOURNMENT: Chair Anderson adjourned the Economic Development Commission meeting at 7:35 p.m. Submitted by Bob Generous Senior Planner Prepared by Amy Weidman Administrative Support Specialist 5 Economic Development Commission Item May 10, 2022 Subject Third Party Food Delivery Fees Section DISCUSSION ITEMS Item No: C.1 Prepared By Bob Generous, Senior Planner File No: SUMMARY At the request of a local business, the City has been asked to look into the possibility of capping delivery fees. The Economic Development Commission (EDC) has been tasked with investigating this option. Currently, there are several lawsuits regarding this issue that the City is also tracking. BACKGROUND The City currently has no regulations regarding Third Party Food Delivery Services. Staff has mailed requests to 16 restaurants in Chanhassen whose websites show Third Party Delivery services to come to the EDC meeting to discuss this issue. DISCUSSION Third party food delivery services include many facets including advertising, order processing, credit card processing, and food delivery. During the COVID-19 Pandemic, these services became a lifeline for restaurants and the use of the services expanded immensely. However, use of the services can lead to fees of up to 30 percent or greater of the order amount. Some communities used the health emergency to institute fee caps. After the general health emergency period was lifted some communities permanently capped delivery fees, such as Minneapolis, Edina, Chicago, New York City, and San Francisco. RECOMMENDATION The EDC shall review and discuss Third Party Food Delivery Services. ATTACHMENTS Ultimate Guide to Restaurant Delivery Services Minneapolis makes permanent caps MN House of Representatives Committee approves 15% cap Delivery Fee Caps are Everywhere 6 Will permanent fee caps actually rein in delivery apps Mpls Third Party Delivery Services Ordinance Revised Nov 30, 2021 2021 Update Third Party Food Delivery Service Lawsuits and Legislation DoorDash v City of New York Delivery Fees Info 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 ORDINANCE By Goodman Amending Title 13 of the Minneapolis Code of Ordinances relating to Licenses and Business Regulations. The City Council of the City of Minneapolis do ordain as follows: Section 1. That the Minneapolis Code of Ordinance be amended by adding thereto a new Chapter 353 to read as follows: CHAPTER 353.- THIRD-PARTY DELIVERY SERVICES 353.10. Definitions. For the purpose of this chapter, the following words and terms are defined and shall be construed as hereinafter set forth unless it is apparent from the context that they shall have a different meaning: Licensed food establishment shall have the meaning provided pursuant to the Minnesota State Food Code and the Minneapolis Code of Ordinances. For the purpose of this chapter, licensed food establishment shall not include convenience or grocery stores. Licensing official means the licensing official of the business licensing division or that individual’s delegees. Online order means an order placed by a customer through an internet platform provided by the third- party food delivery service for delivery or pickup within the city. Person shall have the meaning provided pursuant to MCO § 3.60. Purchase price means the menu price of an online order, excluding taxes, gratuities, or any other fees that may make up the total cost to the customer of an online order. Telephone order means an order placed by a customer to a licensed food establishment through a telephone call forwarded by a call system provided by a third-party food delivery platform for delivery or pickup within the city. Third-party food delivery service means any person, website, mobile application, or other internet platform that offers or arranges for the sale of food and beverages prepared by, and the same-day delivery or same-day pickup of food and beverages from, licensed food establishments. 353.20. – Third-party delivery standards. (a) A third-party food delivery service shall not perform any service services for a fee or disclose any information about a licensed food establishment without the consent of the licensed food establishment. (b) A third-party delivery food delivery service shall not charge any additional fee to a licensed food establishment that the licensed food establishment has not voluntarily agreed to pay. (c) No person shall cause a third-party food delivery service to charge a licensed food establishment a commission fee for the use of the platform's services for delivery that exceeds ten (10) fifteen (15) percent of the purchase price per online order. The provisions of this ordinance shall not limit the ability of any 25 licensed food establishment to choose to pay a higher commission or supplemental fee to access additional advertising or other products and services offered by any third-party food delivery service. (d) The limits on fees, commissions and costs in Paragraph (c) above will not apply to a third-party food delivery service that offers licensed food establishment the option to obtain delivery services for a total fee, commission or cost that does not exceed 15% of the purchasing price of each online order. This will allow third-party food delivery services to provide services to a licensed food establishment with fees, commissions or costs that exceed the 15% limit, provided that they also give the licensed food establishment the option of obtaining delivery services that do not exceed the 15% limit. Third-party food delivery services are prohibited from refusing to provide service to a licensed food establishment based solely on the licensed food establishment’s decision to select the 15% option. (d e) No person shall cause a third-party food delivery service to reduce the compensation rate paid to a delivery service driver or request that a delivery service driver accept lower compensation in the future or garnish gratuities to comply with the terms of this ordinance. (e f) At the time a final price is disclosed to a customer for the intended purchase and delivery of food from a licensed food establishment through a third-party food delivery platform and before that transaction is completed by the customer, the third-party food delivery platform shall disclose to the customer, in plain language and in a conspicuous manner, any commission, fee, or any other monetary payment charged to the customer by the third-party food delivery platform. (f g) After a transaction occurs for the purchase and delivery of food from a licensed food establishment through a third-party food delivery platform, the third-party food delivery platform shall provide an electronic or printed receipt to the customer. The receipt shall disclose, in plain and simple language and in a conspicuous manner: (1) The menu price of the food. (2) Any sales or other tax applied to the transaction. (3) Any delivery charge or service fee, imposed on and collected from the customer by the third-party food delivery platform and by the covered establishment, in addition to the menu price of the food. (4) Any tip/gratuity that will be paid to the person delivering the food, and not to the third-party food delivery platform, that was added into the transaction when it occurred. (5) Any commission associated with the transaction as referenced in subsection 353.20 (f) (3) of this ordinance, not including any agreed-upon higher commission or fee for access to additional advertising or other products or services. (g h) No third-party food delivery service may charge any fee from a licensed food establishment for a telephone order if a telephone call between such licensed food establishment and a customer does not result in an actual transaction during such telephone call. (h i) Subject to any rules and regulations or guidance that may be issued by the licensing official, any licensed food establishment or delivery service driver may submit a complaint of a violation of this section 26 to the licensing official. Any such complaint shall be made in writing to the licensing official and shall include all information relied upon by the licensed food establishment. (i j) The licensing official shall investigate written complaints, shall notify any third-party food delivery services alleged to have violated this ordinance of any complaint, and shall provide a summary of findings regarding any such complaint to both the complainant and the third-party delivery service. Third-party food delivery services shall maintain books and records sufficient for the licensing official to investigate and issue an assessment. Such books and records shall be made available to the licensing official upon demand. (j k) If the licensing official determines a violation of this ordinance has occurred, the third-party food delivery service may be subject to the administrative enforcement and hearing process of Chapter 2 of the Minneapolis Code of Ordinances, each day a violation of this ordinance occurs. For purposes of this ordinance, the continuation of a violation shall be a separate violation for each day the licensing official determines a third-party food delivery service has violated this article. The licensing official shall be authorized to enforce the terms of this ordinance through the issuance of written notices and warnings and/or through the issuance of administrative citations or referral for misdemeanor prosecution or any other legal or equitable relief authorized by law. 353.30. - Additional terms. A violation of this ordinance may be enforced by the issuance of notices, warning letter(s), administrative citation(s), and/or misdemeanor prosecution or any other legal or equitable relief authorized by law. Minn. Stat. § 12.45; MCO § 1.30 and MCO § 259.250. A violation shall be considered an offense subject to administrative enforcement pursuant to MCO § 2.40. 27 28 29 30 31 1 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK -------------------------------------------------------------x DOORDASH, INC., GRUBHUB INC., and PORTIER, LLC, Plaintiffs, -against- CITY OF NEW YORK, Defendant. : : : : : : : : : : No. COMPLAINT JURY TRIAL DEMANDED -------------------------------------------------------------x Plaintiffs DOORDASH, INC., GRUBHUB INC., and PORTIER, LLC (collectively, “Plaintiffs”) by and through their attorneys, Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP, allege for their complaint against Defendant CITY OF NEW YORK, as follows: NATURE OF THE ACTION 1.Plaintiffs operate the popular food ordering and delivery platforms DoorDash, Caviar, Grubhub, Seamless, Postmates, and Uber Eats, which connect restaurants, consumers, and independent delivery couriers. Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, third-party platforms like Plaintiffs have been instrumental in keeping restaurants afloat and food industry workers employed, including by investing millions of dollars in COVID-relief efforts specifically for local restaurants. See infra ¶¶ 39–42. And today, now that restaurants may operate at full capacity, Plaintiffs remain committed to maintaining and restoring the vibrancy of New York City’s local restaurants. Yet, the City of New York (the “City”) has taken the extraordinary measure of imposing permanent price controls on a private and highly competitive industry—the facilitation of food ordering and delivery through third-party platforms. Those permanent price controls will harm not only Plaintiffs, but also the revitalization of the very local restaurants that the City claims to serve. 21-cv-7564 Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 1 of 59 32 2 2. In May 2020, purportedly in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the City enacted unconstitutional—though ostensibly temporary—price controls that impaired existing agreements and prevented restaurants and third-party platforms from freely negotiating the prices that platforms may charge restaurants for their services within the City, primarily by capping the rate that third-party platforms could charge restaurants at 15% of an online order for delivery services and 5% for all other services, including marketing. That law originally was scheduled to expire 90 days after a declared public-health emergency that prohibits any on-premises dining due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The City Council then moved the goalposts three times: first it amended the sunset date to be 90 days after a declared emergency that prohibits restaurants from operating at maximum indoor occupancy; then it extended the applicability of the price controls until the arbitrary date of February 17, 2022 (the “Current Ordinance”);1 and most recently, it removed the law’s sunset date altogether, thus making it permanent (the “Pending Amendment”).2 3. This now-indefinite legislation bears no relationship to any public-health emergency, and qualifies as nothing more than unconstitutional, harmful, and unnecessary government overreach that should be struck down. The Ordinance is unconstitutional because, among other things, it interferes with freely negotiated contracts between platforms and restaurants by changing and dictating the economic terms on which a dynamic industry operates. 4. The United States and New York Constitutions prohibit such government overreach by safeguarding the terms of freely negotiated contracts, protecting property rights and the right to pursue legitimate business enterprises, and providing for due process and equal protection under 1 As relevant here, NYC Int. No. 2359-A, Local Law 2021/094 (amending Section 20-846 of the New York City Administrative Code). Ex. A. 2 As relevant here, NYC Int. No. 2390. Ex. B. Mayor de Blasio has until September 25, 2021 to sign or veto Int. No. 2390 (or take no action). The Current Ordinance and the Pending Amendment (which also includes Int. No. 1897-A, discussed infra) are collectively referred to as the “Ordinance,” unless otherwise noted. Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 2 of 59 33 3 the law. Left unchecked, the Ordinance sets a dangerous precedent. Indeed, in refusing to sign a price control measure into law, Mayor London Breed of San Francisco described permanent price controls as “unnecessarily prescriptive in limiting the business models of the third-party organizations, and oversteps what is necessary for the public good.”3 The same is true here. 5. The Ordinance is also harmful. The cost of facilitating food delivery and marketing will likely shift to consumers, thereby reducing order amounts or volume, lowering restaurant revenues, decreasing earning opportunities for delivery couriers, and resulting in less tax revenue in the City’s coffers. There is no evidence that the City Council solicited or reviewed any data to understand the impact of this extended price-fixing regime, including the relationship between third-party platform commissions and restaurant profitability, or the negative externalities the Ordinance will impose on New York City restaurants, couriers, and consumers. Indeed, the City appears to have ignored the negative externalities various advocacy organizations and trade associations pointedly raised at multiple committee hearings (see infra ¶ 72), and those that many couriers described in their submitted testimony (see infra ¶¶ 74, 91). Hundreds of delivery couriers who use Plaintiffs’ platforms to earn livings—single parents, primary caretakers, and single- income families—objected to the Ordinance as detrimental to their earning opportunities and harmful to the restaurant industry. For example, as one courier explained: I’m worried that this bill will have negative effects on people like myself who work on these platforms. A permanent price control would directly hurt delivery workers’ ability to make money. Restaurants pay app-based delivery companies for a variety of services through commissions, one of these being delivery services. Capping these commissions means less earnings for people like me. A commission cap could also mean delivery services get more expensive for the customers I deliver to, which ultimately means less orders for me. 3 Letter from Mayor London Breed to Shamann Walton re File 210492 (July 9, 2021). Ex. C. Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 3 of 59 34 4 And, as another courier told the City Council, “I’m writing to tell you that I hope you will listen to people like me who are scared that [the Ordinance] will actually reduce work opportunities for people like me.” But the City did not listen. Instead, as part of its “legislate first, study second” approach, the City postponed analyzing the impact of permanent price controls until 2023, at which point a report will be authorized examining the Ordinance’s impact. 6. The Ordinance is also unnecessary. Restaurants need not partner with third-party platforms. Restaurants have an array of options for receiving orders and providing delivery, including providing delivery services themselves, as well as third-party options well below the price control established by the City (including delivery options where restaurants pay no fees or little more than credit card processing fees, see infra ¶ 14). Likewise, restaurants have access to many marketing options (within and apart from third-party platforms) to attract customers and promote their businesses, including online advertising channels—such as building their own websites and using sites like Google and Yelp, among many others—and offline advertising mediums, such as printing flyers or using billboards. 7. Furthermore, if the City’s goal is to improve the profitability of local restaurants, then the City—which projected a budget surplus for Fiscal Year 2021 of $3.4 billion4—has other, lawful means to aid restaurants, such as tax breaks or grants.5 But rather than exercise one of those lawful options, the City chose instead to adopt an irrational law, driven by naked animosity towards 4 DeNapoli: Some Bright Spots for NYC Finances in FY21, but Long-Term Challenges Looming, OFFICE OF THE N.Y. STATE COMPTROLLER (Feb. 23, 2021), https://bit.ly/3mlcWCe (last visited Sept. 8, 2021). 5 Indeed, earlier this year, the National Restaurant Association issued an 11-point blueprint for state and local policymakers for restaurant recovery. This blueprint included policies like tax breaks and grants but did not state or even suggest that commission caps were necessary for restaurant recovery. See Letter from Nat’l Rest. Ass’n to Governor Andrew Cuomo (Feb. 18, 2021), https://bit.ly/3jXEIls (last visited Sept. 8, 2021). Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 4 of 59 35 5 third-party platforms and unlawful economic protectionism, in violation of the United States and New York Constitutions and beyond the scope of New York City’s limited police power. 8. That the Ordinance was driven by such is evident from lawmakers’ many public statements. For example, prior to the announcement of any public state of emergency, one of the Ordinance’s sponsors, Council Member Francisco Moya, introduced a 10% commission cap bill, and later tweeted, “NYC local restaurants needed a 10% cap on delivery fees from third party services like GrubHub long before #COVID19 hit us. They damn sure need it now.”6 9. The Current Ordinance’s text itself clearly targets certain large, out-of-state third- party platforms. Notably, the Ordinance does not regulate the prices of other businesses with which restaurants regularly contract, such as wholesale food and supply companies, point-of-sale vendors, online reservation platforms, credit card processing companies, or other marketing companies. Indeed, the Ordinance irrationally limits third-party platforms like Plaintiffs to charging 15% per order for delivery services and 5% per order for marketing services, which services other companies may provide to the very same restaurants at an unregulated price. 10. Yet the City has not offered any explanation for why it randomly selected a 15% cap for delivery services nor why it randomly selected a 5% cap for all non-delivery services performed on behalf of restaurants, including marketing services. Nothing in the Ordinance, legislative history, or public record explains why the City chose these arbitrary figures, much less how they are reasonably related (which they are not) to the public-health emergency that purportedly prompted their imposition in the first place. Nor is there any justification for imposing such a restrictive cap (or any cap at all) on marketing services offered by food-delivery companies, in particular, when other marketing and advertising providers, such as Google, Facebook, or 6 Francisco Moya (@FranciscoMoyaNY), TWITTER (Apr. 14, 2020), https://bit.ly/3CBqsaA (last visited Sept. 8, 2021). Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 5 of 59 36 6 Twitter, remain unrestricted. The City made no effort to study the economic impact and sustainability of the cap on third-party platforms, including whether they can even provide the same services and operate profitably at that level; instead, it expressly opted to not undertake any analysis until 2023. 11. The City’s unconstitutional and irrational motivations are made all the more obvious by the slew of other laws, alongside the Ordinance, that the City recently passed that target third-party platforms. These include, among others: (1) Int. No. 1897-A (also part of the Pending Amendment), requiring third-party platforms to obtain licenses from the Department of Consumer and Worker Protection (“DCWP”) every two years in order to conduct business in New York City, and which licenses the DCWP could deny or revoke upon the occurrence of just two technical violations of a whole host of various City regulations over the course of a period of two years; and (2) Int. No. 2311, requiring that third-party platforms share their customers’ personally identifying and sensitive data with a requesting restaurant. Each of these laws places undue burdens on third- party platforms without consideration of the many impracticalities, including significant privacy challenges, they pose. 12. For at least the last century, courts in New York and elsewhere have consistently held that federal and state constitutions prohibit local governments from engaging in economic protectionism and fixing prices to benefit only a segment of the public—such as one industry or group of businesses. See People v. Cohen, 272 N.Y. 319, 322 (1936) (holding that an ordinance banning certain Broadway markets from selling food from their windows to protect the real estate value of nearby properties bore “no relation to the welfare of the public but [was] designed for the convenience and interest of a special class”); see also State Bd. of Dry Cleaners v. Thrift-D-Lux Cleaners, Inc., 40 Cal. 2d 436, 447 (1953) (holding that a minimum dry cleaning price-setting Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 6 of 59 37 7 ordinance was unconstitutional because it “protect[s] the industry” which is “only a small segment of the general public”); In re Kazas, 22 Cal. App. 2d 161, 171 (1937) (holding that a municipality could not legislate minimum barbershop prices to protect barbers). In the years since these cases unequivocally held that price-fixing laws seeking to protect favored industries are unconstitutional, no legislature has enacted price-fixing legislation comparable to the Ordinance. 13. The only types of price controls that typically survive constitutional scrutiny are those applicable to public utilities of civic necessities (e.g., electricity, gas, and water). Unlike these public utilities—which are often granted geographic monopolies in exchange for regulated prices—Plaintiffs compete vigorously with each other and with other platforms for delivery- related services and marketing services, as well as with many advertising platforms not subject to an arbitrary 5% price cap, such as Google, Facebook, Twitter, Yelp, Yellow Pages, radio, billboards, and more. Merchants (and consumers) can choose which platforms to use, or can arrange for marketing, order taking, and delivery through various other channels. This choice and the competition it drives is the hallmark of our economic system. There was no reason to regulate third-party platforms like public utilities even during the state of emergency, let alone now in the absence of such a declared emergency and accompanying restrictions. 14. In light of this significant competition, Plaintiffs have always strived for fair contracts that properly value the services that their platforms offer to restaurants. Pursuant to those contracts, which are generally terminable at will, Plaintiffs commonly charge restaurants a commission that is an agreed-upon percentage of a consumer’s order—such that Plaintiffs do not earn these commissions unless the restaurant also earns revenues. Many restaurants find this to be an advantage compared to offering their own delivery services, the costs of which restaurants will have to bear regardless of whether their order volumes justify the expenses. Plaintiffs spend Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 7 of 59 38 8 hundreds of millions of dollars annually in marketing their platforms, which enables restaurants on their platforms to reach new and existing consumers for incremental orders, because when restaurants survive and succeed, so do Plaintiffs. As a result, restaurants have had meaningful choice in whether and how they use delivery, order facilitation, and marketing services from Plaintiffs to grow their businesses. For example, restaurants can: a. Choose whether to offer delivery at all; b. Choose to directly receive and process orders and/or facilitate delivery themselves without using any third-party companies, such as by having customers call the restaurants directly to place an order to be filled by the restaurants’ own delivery staff, and/or operating their own website; c. Choose which, if any, third-party platform to use; d. Choose a third-party delivery option that charges nothing more than credit card fees; e. Choose a third-party delivery option that charges a flat fee per delivery instead of a commission; or f. Choose from a range of commission-based third-party delivery and marketing packages at different price points, depending on the products and services that are best suited to their needs. 15. And due to the intense competition in this market, third-party delivery services are likely to continue to provide new services and package options in the future. But this innovation will be hampered by the City’s latest overreach. New York City’s permanent price control puts restaurants’ choices in jeopardy because consumers will likely have to bear increased costs, which will drive down orders and limit what services Plaintiffs will be able to offer going forward. Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 8 of 59 39 9 Accordingly, through this Complaint, Plaintiffs seek declaratory relief, injunctive relief, and damages on the grounds that the Ordinance violates: a. The Contract Clause of the United States Constitution; b. The Takings Clauses of the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution (incorporated by the Fourteenth Amendment) and Article I, Section 7 of the New York Constitution; c. Article IX, Section 2(c) of the New York Constitution and related statutes (Police Power); d. The Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article I, Section 6 of the New York Constitution (Due Process); e. The Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article I, Section 11 of the New York Constitution (Equal Protection); and f. The Dormant Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution. 16. In pursuing this action, Plaintiffs seek to vindicate the deprivation of their federal constitutional rights under color of state statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, and/or usage. Thus, Plaintiffs seek damages and other relief under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Plaintiffs are also entitled to attorneys’ fees and expert fees if they prevail on any of their Section 1983 claims. See 42 U.S.C. § 1988. PARTIES 17. Plaintiff DoorDash, Inc. (“DoorDash”) is a Delaware corporation founded in 2013 and headquartered in San Francisco, California. Since day one, DoorDash’s mission has been to empower local businesses by providing access to e-commerce. Its platforms (including the DoorDash and Caviar platforms) connect consumers, a broad array of restaurants, and in some cases, delivery couriers, each of whom is affected by the Ordinance. DoorDash offers several Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 9 of 59 40 10 options to restaurants, including Marketplace (DoorDash’s web- and app-based platform that facilitates food pickup and delivery), Storefront (an application that enables restaurants to create a branded online store to facilitate pickup and delivery from their own website, in exchange for payment of credit card processing fees of 2.9%, plus $0.30 per order), and Drive (a platform that facilitates delivery of orders originating outside the Marketplace in exchange for a flat fee). As such, DoorDash has a beneficial interest in the relief sought herein. 18. Plaintiff Grubhub Inc. (“Grubhub”) is a Delaware corporation founded in 2004 and headquartered in Chicago, Illinois. Grubhub’s long-standing priority has been to serve restaurants. Grubhub’s online food ordering and delivery marketplace (operating under the Grubhub and Seamless brands) connects consumers with a broad array of local takeout and delivery restaurants, and in a minority of cases, independent-contractor couriers. Grubhub elevates food ordering through innovative restaurant technology, easy-to-use platforms, and an improved delivery experience, which includes the Grubhub Guarantee7 to facilitate diner satisfaction and protect restaurants’ reputations. Grubhub drives orders to restaurants through its Marketplace, while also offering restaurants tools to grow their own digital businesses. These tools include Grubhub Direct, which gives restaurants customized ordering websites along with loyalty and customer data tools, enabling them to market directly to their consumers without paying any marketing commissions. Grubhub has a beneficial interest in the relief sought herein. 19. Plaintiff Portier, LLC (“Uber Eats”) is a Delaware company founded in 2014 and headquartered in San Francisco, California. Uber Eats is a wholly owned subsidiary of Uber Technologies, Inc. It contracts with merchants in New York City to grant them access to the Uber 7 The Grubhub Guarantee ensures that consumers receive the best price for their order. More specifically, consumers who find a better price through one of Grubhub’s competitors are eligible to receive the difference in price plus $5 off their next order. What Is the Grubhub Guarantee?, GRUBHUB, https://bit.ly/3AIxybS (last visited Sept. 8, 2021). Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 10 of 59 41 11 Eats online platform. Postmates, which was acquired by Uber Technologies, Inc., assigned its rights in merchant agreements to Uber Eats. Uber Eats’s online marketplace platforms (operating under the Uber Eats and Postmates brands) connect restaurants and other merchants to consumers and a network of independent delivery people in their communities. Consumers can access the Uber Eats platforms via websites or mobile applications on a smartphone. Restaurants can access the Uber Eats platforms through pricing packages that vary based on their individual needs, with some restaurants opting for services priced below the Ordinance’s commission caps, and some for services priced above. Uber Eats facilitates these services between merchants and consumers that are affected by the Ordinance. As such, Uber Eats has a beneficial interest in the relief sought herein. 20. Defendant City of New York (the “City” or “New York City”) is a municipal corporation organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the State of New York. JURISDICTION AND VENUE 21. This Court has jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1331 and 42 U.S.C. § 1983 over Plaintiffs’ federal constitutional claims, and has supplemental jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1367 over the remaining claims. This Court also has jurisdiction over the claims and relief sought pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1332, 1343(a), 2201, and 2202. 22. Plaintiffs bring this action as both a facial challenge and “as-applied” challenges to the Ordinance, and are excused from exhausting any administrative remedy before the City. Plaintiffs allege that the Ordinance is invalid: (1) on its face, (2) as applied to Plaintiffs, and (3) as applied to certain of Plaintiffs’ contracts with New York City restaurants. 23. Venue is proper in this Court because the Ordinance was enacted by the New York City Council, and the violations of Plaintiffs’ rights occurred in this judicial district. Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 11 of 59 42 12 FACTUAL ALLEGATIONS A. The Role of Commissions Charged by Third-Party Platforms 24. Plaintiffs operate third-party platforms in New York City and elsewhere that connect restaurants with couriers and consumers who wish to purchase food and have it delivered to them or be ready for pickup. Consumers can access the platforms via Plaintiffs’ websites or applications on a smartphone. 25. Other third-party platforms operating in New York City and elsewhere in the United States include Delivery.com, Relay, and Slice, among others. Because restaurants do not need to use Plaintiffs’ platforms at all, and because Plaintiffs compete with many other companies, they have powerful market-based incentives to offer the best overall value proposition to restaurants. 26. The services offered by third-party platforms are good for restaurants. The emergence of third-party platforms has resulted in the expansion of restaurants’ consumer bases. Consumers who otherwise would not have patronized a restaurant in person or would not have discovered a restaurant but for Plaintiffs’ platforms use the platforms to purchase food from that restaurant to be delivered or picked up. Furthermore, restaurants that used Plaintiffs’ platforms were more likely to stay in business throughout the pandemic. For example, the odds of staying in business during the pandemic were eight times better for restaurants on DoorDash compared to all U.S. restaurants. The pandemic also did not affect the basic economics of restaurants’ use of Plaintiffs’ delivery platforms. Before the pandemic, restaurants grew their revenue through Plaintiffs’ platforms; if they had not, they would have stopped using the platforms—as they are able to do at any time without any cost or penalty. 27. Plaintiffs generate revenue to cover their costs through commissions charged to restaurants. These commissions represent a substantial part of Plaintiffs’ revenue streams. Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 12 of 59 43 13 28. The operational costs that Plaintiffs incur to drive demand to and facilitate delivery on behalf of restaurants include (but are not limited to): a. Marketing local restaurants to consumers, including promotions and advertising to drive demand; b. Platform development, maintenance, and operation; c. Procurement and development of technology, including for payment processing, order management, and dispatching; d. Procurement and development of restaurant-dedicated products to manage promotions, order volume, and menus; e. Onboarding delivery couriers, including background checks for every courier on Plaintiffs’ platforms; f. Compensating delivery couriers for their work; g. Safety of delivery couriers, including auto insurance costs and personal protective equipment; and h. Dedicated customer service specialists to provide support to restaurants, couriers, and consumers for orders placed through Plaintiffs’ platforms. 29. A typical contract between Plaintiffs and a restaurant includes a commission where the restaurant agrees to pay Plaintiff a fixed percentage of the price of the consumer’s order in exchange for certain services. Plaintiffs have used this type of percentage commission structure with thousands of New York City restaurants for many years. 30. Restaurants are generally free to leave Plaintiffs’ platforms at any time for any reason. Even though DoorDash’s and Grubhub’s contracts with restaurants are terminable at will, and most of Uber Eats’s contracts with restaurants are likewise terminable at will, restaurants Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 13 of 59 44 14 choose to maintain these contracts—including the percentage commission structures contained therein—typically for several years because restaurants recognize the value that Plaintiffs provide. Almost all restaurants voluntarily enter into contracts with Plaintiffs with commissions greater than what the Ordinance allows so as to gain access to a broader suite of services, including, for example, increased delivery radius or access to customer subscription services. 31. Restaurant commissions are not one-size-fits-all. If restaurants choose to partner with Plaintiffs, they have significant flexibility in how they do so, including which of Plaintiffs’ services they use. Restaurants can partner with DoorDash to facilitate delivery via Marketplace, Storefront, and Drive. A restaurant that selects Marketplace as the means to facilitate delivery can opt in to one of three Partnership Plans at different price points depending on the products and services that are best suited to its needs, including a Basic Partnership Plan where DoorDash facilitates the delivery of online orders for a commission rate of 15%. However, restaurants can also choose enhanced services by opting into the Plus or Premium Packages in exchange for higher commission rates. The vast majority of restaurants that have opted into a Partnership Plan in New York City have chosen a plan that includes a commission greater than 15%. Alternatively, restaurants can select Storefront, a commission-free option that enables restaurants to create branded online stores to facilitate pickup and delivery from their own websites, in exchange for payment of credit card processing fees of 2.9%, plus $0.30 per order. 32. Restaurants that use products like Grubhub’s Direct Order Toolkit or Grubhub Direct do not pay any marketing commissions. Restaurants that opt to use the Grubhub Marketplace to generate orders from the Grubhub network of more than 30 million consumers select a negotiable marketing package. For example, restaurants can choose marketing rates as low as 5% and add other marketing and/or delivery services that best suit their businesses for an Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 14 of 59 45 15 additional commission. For contracts between Grubhub and restaurants that include both delivery facilitation and marketing, the total commission rate is generally greater than 15% (where the delivery commission is largely a pass-through charge to cover Grubhub’s delivery costs). 33. For the Uber Eats platforms, Uber Eats has used contracts with a fixed-percentage commission structure with many restaurants for many years. Pricing packages agreed to by Uber Eats’s restaurant partners vary based on their individual businesses’ needs—from well below to above the current caps set by the City—and can include marketing and advertising services, payment and order processing, customer support services, data and insights to inform their operations, as well as the fulfillment of delivery services. Restaurants that choose to use their own couriers, but rely on Uber Eats’s apps to reach customers, as well as for order and payment processing, benefit from reduced pricing on a per-order basis. In addition, in 2020, Uber Eats introduced the option for restaurants to partner with Uber to add online ordering directly to their own websites to facilitate pickup and delivery orders—this option is currently available to restaurants for only the cost of payment processing. Uber Eats’s offerings also include commission percentages that exceed the amounts permitted by the Ordinance. Because of the Ordinance, Uber Eats cannot charge what the competitive market would allow. But for the Ordinance, Uber Eats likewise would in the future enter into agreements with restaurants for various packages of service levels, at per-order percentages in excess of those allowed by the Ordinance. As such, Uber Eats is inhibited from innovating new combinations of services and benefits for restaurants that have per-order value over and above the limits set by the Ordinance. 34. New York City lawmakers who support commission caps have not viewed such measures as limited to COVID-19 emergency relief. Council Member Moya, who first introduced a permanent 10% commission cap before any COVID-19 state of emergency was declared, stated Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 15 of 59 46 16 that permanent caps are necessary to protect “small businesses.”8 And Council Member Gjonaj claimed that his “mandate” is to step in to “level [the] playing field,” which he inaccurately frames as a “David versus Goliath relationship” between “mom-and-pop eateries,” that the City must protect, and “venture capital backed food delivery platforms.”9 But no restaurant is forced to use DoorDash, Grubhub, or Uber Eats’s platforms, or any other third-party platform (or to even offer delivery and/or takeout options at all). Restaurants can, among other things, opt to hire their own delivery drivers, field customer calls directly, and create their own websites. Moreover, the Ordinance leaves totally untouched all other companies, apart from third-party platforms, that transact with restaurants for marketing and other services. And contrary to lawmakers’ assertions, third-party platforms support small businesses. As just two examples, 65% of restaurants say they were able to increase their profits during COVID-19 because of DoorDash, and, in a survey, nearly 9 out of 10 independent restaurant operators agreed that Grubhub increases the volume of takeout and delivery orders. The commissions that restaurants pay in exchange for the services they select from Plaintiffs’ platforms pay in part for the costs of operating these platforms, see supra ¶ 28, which ultimately benefit restaurants. 35. Nonetheless, the New York City Council cited the COVID-19 pandemic as its purported justification to pass a law that has now been extended past the expiration of the state of emergency, and well past the date when restaurants were allowed to open at 100% capacity, with 8 Richard Calder, Permanent Cap on Delivery-App Fees Proposed for New York City, WALL ST. J. (June 24, 2021), https://on.wsj.com/2X4cy0q (last visited Sept. 8, 2021). 9 Robbie Sequeira, Capped 3rd-Party Food Delivery Service Fee Could Affect NYC Restaurant Industry, BRONX TIMES (July 2, 2021), https://bit.ly/3jE6XFU (last visited Sept. 8, 2021). Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 16 of 59 47 17 the express (and later, successful) aim of converting this once-temporary measure into permanent legislation and with no connection to public health or safety.10 B. The City Announces an Emergency Temporary Cap on Third-Party Delivery and Other Commissions Purportedly in Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic 36. COVID-19 is a novel virus that began spreading across the United States in early 2020. In March 2020, Mayor Bill de Blasio declared a state of emergency in the City of New York due to COVID-19. 37. Also in March 2020, then-Governor Andrew Cuomo declared a disaster emergency for the State of New York due to COVID-19. Governor Cuomo signed an executive order entitled New York State on PAUSE (Policies Assure Uniform Safety for Everyone) (“PAUSE”), ordering all nonessential businesses and retailers statewide to close and banning all nonessential gatherings of any size, for any reason. The executive order also encouraged New York residents to stay home as much as possible, and required anyone who did go outside to maintain at least six feet of space from any other person. That order was subsequently extended several times. 38. In or around March and April of 2020, the New York State Department of Economic Development issued updated guidance categorizing dine-in restaurants as “non- essential” but excluding take-out or delivery options. Thus, seated dining in restaurants was suspended in New York. 10 Indeed, interest groups that have advocated for such legislation do not pretend that it is tied in any way to the COVID-19 pandemic. For example, Kathleen Reilly, the government affairs coordinator for the New York City Restaurant Association stated: “Today, the City Council is taking the bold opportunity to consider making the fee caps permanent and we are fully supportive of this move.” See supra note 9. Similarly, Randy Peers, Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce President and CEO, stated: “We applaud the City Council for passing legislation that caps third party platform delivery fees and protects restaurants from predatory practices. The next step is enacting these protections on a permanent basis, and ensuring that all small businesses across the city have resources and support the[y] need to reopen.” Jason Rogovich, New York City Council Approves Two Bills Limiting Third-Party Delivery Service Fees, CITY LAND (May 19, 2020), https://bit.ly/3jFCF5B (last visited Sept. 8, 2021). Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 17 of 59 48 18 39. Beginning in March 2020 and continuing throughout the public-health emergency, Plaintiffs made significant investments. For example, between March and May 2020, DoorDash relief programs saved restaurants more than $120 million, as DoorDash undertook significant measures to protect and support consumers and couriers, and also made significant investments to support local restaurants. For instance, DoorDash provided a 30-day commission-free trial to approximately 9,000 restaurants in New York City that joined its platform during the pandemic; voluntarily reduced commissions for existing restaurants by half from April 9, 2020 to May 31, 2020; further invested millions of dollars to reduce or eliminate consumer fees and generate more orders for restaurants, which helped restaurants keep their doors open for delivery; and built a new product to enable every independent restaurant or franchise to receive daily payouts to ease cash flow concerns. In addition, DoorDash granted $500,000 to help New York City restaurants make preparations for a winter of outdoor dining, with 100 restaurants receiving $5,000 each, in partnership with the New York Hospitality Alliance. It then granted $20,000 each to 20 New York City restaurants as part of the Main Street Strong Accelerator, which, in addition to the grant, gave participating restaurants access to an eight-week, hands-on restaurant operator course that involved small business advising and mentorship and one-on-one financial, legal, and technological expert advice, as well as free marketing and merchandising from DoorDash. And it granted another $250,000 to ROAR’s NYC Employee Relief Fund, in partnership with the Robin Hood foundation, which provided $500 one-time grants to the City’s restaurant workers. 40. Likewise, Grubhub dedicated hundreds of millions of dollars to support restaurants directly. Specifically, rather than retaining profits it would have generated during the pandemic, Grubhub reinvested these profits to support restaurants, including through deferred and waived commissions for independent restaurants, Grubhub-funded diner promotions on behalf of Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 18 of 59 49 19 restaurants, and platform improvements. Grubhub’s Community Relief Fund collected more than $30 million, which was used to directly support restaurants, workers, couriers, first responders, and others impacted by the crisis. Grubhub also provided hundreds of grants to small restaurants in New York City through the Restaurant Strong Fund to assist with restaurant relief, employee support, and post-pandemic re-openings. In addition, Grubhub invested in procedures to help keep consumers, restaurants, and couriers safe. During the pandemic, Grubhub provided more than $2.4 million in charitable contributions to New York City restaurants and organizations supporting restaurants and restaurant workers. 41. Similarly, Uber Eats acted quickly when the pandemic hit, waiving consumer- facing delivery fees for all orders from small business restaurants, commissions on all pickup orders, and launching a first-of-its kind feature allowing Uber Eats consumers to contribute directly to restaurants in-app and a commitment from Uber to match with donations to the Restaurant Employee Relief Fund. More than $20 million was put directly into the hands of restaurants as a result of this initiative. Uber Eats also launched a daily payout feature to remit payouts quickly and ease cash flow concerns for restaurants, provided $4.5 million in grants to restaurants as part of its $20 million Eat Local Support Initiative, and made payments to facilitate outdoor dining infrastructure for black-owned restaurants—among the hardest hit by the pandemic—in Harlem in partnership with Harlem Park to Park. 42. Plaintiffs’ actions helped many restaurants keep their doors open during the pandemic, pay bills, and retain and hire additional staff. Plaintiffs’ platforms also created earning opportunities for residents of New York City, who either became unemployed in the midst of the pandemic or required supplemental income, but found work as delivery couriers, as described by many couriers in their testimony submitted to the City Council in opposition to the Ordinance. Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 19 of 59 50 20 43. During the COVID-19 pandemic and PAUSE orders, many New York City consumers chose to rely on third-party platforms to facilitate delivery of food to their homes. Similarly, many New York City restaurants chose to rely on platforms to facilitate the sale and delivery of their food. Accordingly, during the COVID-19 pandemic, restaurant demand for use of Plaintiffs’ platforms generally increased. 44. The COVID-19 pandemic also caused many of Plaintiffs’ costs to greatly increase. For example, to ensure that delivery couriers could remain active and earning, DoorDash provided free personal protective equipment and highly subsidized on-demand healthcare to couriers, and provided financial assistance to couriers who tested positive for COVID-19 and those in certain other high-risk categories. Likewise, Grubhub paid considerably more to delivery couriers on a per-order basis, provided them with personal protective equipment at no cost, and also provided couriers with COVID-19 sick pay. And Uber Eats also helped couriers with personal protective equipment and direct financial payments. 45. Nevertheless, on May 13, 2020, the New York City Council approved Int. No. 1908-B, which temporarily restricted the commissions charged by so-called “third-party delivery services,” like Plaintiffs, “during, and for 90 days after, a declared emergency that prohibits on-premises dining.”11 The bill capped commissions that third-party food delivery services can charge a restaurant for providing delivery services at 15% per order and 5% per order for all other services,12 including for marketing services, though other businesses that provide similar services remained unrestricted. 11 All legislative materials for Int. No. 1908-B are available at https://on.nyc.gov/3yUxa8A, unless otherwise noted. 12 The bill excluded from the definition of “other services” credit card processing fees. Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 20 of 59 51 21 46. Int. No. 1908 was cosponsored by Council Members Mark Gjonaj and Francisco Moya, among others, and was first introduced to the City Council by Council Member Moya on February 27, 2020—well before New York State or New York City announced any state of emergency or restricted restaurant occupancy. 47. When it was first introduced, Int. No. 1908’s title was “A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to per-order fees charged by third-party food delivery services.” That bill would have made it “unlawful for third-party food delivery services to charge covered establishments a fee per online order for the use of their services that totals more than 10% of the purchase price of such online order.” There was no time limit to the commission cap or distinction between delivery and other charges, and the bill made no mention of any emergency or temporary measures. 48. When the original bill came out of the Committee on Small Business, on or around February 27, 2020—notably, before the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic and before any declared state of emergency in New York—its proposed 10% cap was justified as a lifeline to local restaurants. In introducing the bill on February 27, Council Member Moya argued, incorrectly, that “restaurants across the city and across the country [are] at the mercy of third party food delivery services like Grub Hub [sic] and Uber Eats,” and that restaurants need “these food delivery apps to reach customers and stay in business,” but that government intervention was necessary for restaurants’ “survival.” 49. The original bill was not introduced as an emergency and temporary COVID-19 response.13 Indeed, Council Member Moya made that clear on April 14, 2020, after the State and 13 For example, also introduced on February 27, 2020 were bills: (1) prohibiting third-party platforms from limiting the purchase price of menu items (Int. No. 1907); (2) requiring third-party platforms disclose to consumers any fees paid by participating restaurants (Int. No. 1896); and (3) requiring third-party platforms to obtain a license every two years to operate in New York City (Int. No. 1897). Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 21 of 59 52 22 City had declared a state of emergency and indoor dining was suspended, when he tweeted “NYC local restaurants needed a 10% cap on delivery fees from third party services like GrubHub long before #COVID19 hit us. They damn sure need it now.”14 50. Once the pandemic spread, a state of emergency was declared, and restrictions were placed on on-premises dining, the stated rationale for the commission cap bill shifted to providing temporary relief to restaurants during the pandemic, and the bill was amended to reflect that shift. 51. The amended commission cap bill, Int. No. 1908-B, was expressly described as a temporary measure tied to the duration of the emergency capacity restrictions placed on restaurants. But on May 13, 2020, the day the bill was passed, Council Member Gjonaj said that he “remain[ed] confident that we will pass the full set of bills that were introduced earlier this year on the primary relief to small mom and pop shops just looking for their fair playing field and use the service of these venture capital backed Silicon Valley Tech behemoths.” 52. In public statements upon the passage of Int. No. 1908-B, Council Member Moya stated, again incorrectly, that the “relationship” between “[m]om and pop restaurants across New York City” and “billion-dollar tech companies . . . isn’t unique to the pandemic. Exorbitant fees from third-party food delivery services threatened restaurants before the COVID-19 outbreak but like so many other issues, this crisis has amplified and expanded that inequity to devastating effects. . . . By capping the fees third-party food apps can charge restaurants during declared states of emergency, restaurants can continue providing essential services while not putting themselves out of business in the process.”15 Similarly, Council Member Gjonaj stated that “the New York City Council took a historic step in standing up for locally owned restaurants that are struggling to 14 See supra note 6. 15 Council Votes to Provide Relief to Small Businesses and Restaurants Impacted by COVID-19 Pandemic, N.Y.C. COUNCIL (May 13, 2020), https://on.nyc.gov/37sNySA (last visited Sept. 8, 2021). Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 22 of 59 53 23 stay afloat during the COVID-19 public health crisis. By capping the sky-high commissions charged by third-party food delivery platforms . . . the City of New York has taken decisive action to stand up for small businesses who only ask for a fair shot.”16 53. On May 26, 2020, Mayor de Blasio signed Int. No. 1908-B into law, enacting Local Law 2020/052, which added Subchapter 22 to Title 20, Chapter 5 of the Administrative Code of New York City, codified at N.Y.C. Admin. Code §§ 20-845–848 (the “Local Law”). Ex. D. 54. Subchapter 22 was entitled “Third-Party Food Delivery Services.” Section 20-846, as originally enacted, provided: (a) It shall be unlawful for a third-party food delivery service to charge a food service establishment a delivery fee that totals more than 15% of the purchase price of each online order. (b) It shall be unlawful for a third-party food delivery service to charge a food service establishment any fee or fees other than a delivery fee for the use of their service greater than 5% of the purchase price of each online order. Any fees or other charges from a third-party food delivery service to a food service establishment beyond such maximum 5% fee per order, and a delivery fee collected pursuant to subdivision a of this section, are unlawful. (c) The requirements of this section apply only during a declared emergency and for a period of 90 days after the end of a declared emergency. 55. Each violation of Section 20-846 is subject to a $1,000 fine per day, in addition to injunctive relief, restitution, and other costs. 56. As originally enacted, the Local Law defined “declared emergency” as “the period during which a state disaster emergency has been declared by the governor of the state of New York or a state of emergency has been declared by the mayor, such declaration is in effect in the city, and all food service establishments in the city are prohibited from providing food for consumption on-premises.” 16 Rogovich, supra note 10. Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 23 of 59 54 24 57. But in August 2020, the City Council moved the goalposts by extending the Local Law until 90 days after full-capacity indoor dining resumed in restaurants when it passed Int. No. 2054-A.17 Ex. E. The prohibition on indoor dining was lifted months before restaurants were permitted to return to maximum capacity, with a gradual phasing of capacity restrictions over time. 58. The Local Law (like the Current Ordinance that later followed it) applies only to “third-party food delivery service[s],” defined as “any website, mobile application or other internet service that offers or arranges for the sale of food and beverages prepared by, and the same-day delivery or same-day pickup of food and beverages from, no fewer than 20 food service establishments located in the city that are owned and operated by different persons.” N.Y.C. Admin. Code § 20-845. The term “food service establishment” is defined by Section 81.03 of the New York City Health Code as “a place where food is provided for individual portion service directly to the consumer whether such food is provided free of charge or sold, and whether consumption occurs on or off the premises or is provided from a pushcart, stand or vehicle.” Thus, unlike in some other jurisdictions, even large chain restaurants can take advantage of the commission cap. Notwithstanding the statements from Council Members Moya and Gjonaj, the Local Law and Ordinance do not limit their protection to “mom and pop shops,” but instead apply to any “food service establishment,” including those that are part of multinational conglomerates. 59. The Local Law and Ordinance define “delivery fee” as “a fee charged by a third- party food delivery service for providing a food service establishment with a service that delivers food from such establishment to customers.” N.Y.C. Admin. Code § 20-845. Such fees are arbitrarily capped at 15% of the purchase price of an order. 17 All legislative materials for Int. No. 2054-A are available at https://on.nyc.gov/3zZvRXi, unless otherwise noted. Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 24 of 59 55 25 60. Under the Local Law and Ordinance, “delivery fee” “does not include any other fee that may be charged by a third-party food delivery service to a food service establishment, such as fees for listing or advertising the food service establishment on the third-party food delivery service platform or fees related to processing the online order.” All such other fees (apart from credit card processing fees)—such as those for marketing—are arbitrarily capped at 5% of the order’s purchase price. 61. Neither the Local Law nor the Ordinance fixes the price of any goods or services provided to restaurants by businesses that fall outside the definition of “third-party food delivery services,” such as raw ingredient or equipment suppliers, point-of-sale vendors, or online reservation platforms. This is despite the fact that other companies with which restaurants frequently contract have seen their stock prices soar recently: Sysco’s stock has risen by over 28% in the past year, while US Foods’s stock has risen over 41%.18 Neither the Local Law nor the Ordinance acknowledges the costs of raw ingredients or supplies to restaurants or takes any steps to cap their prices. 62. Similarly, neither the Local Law nor the Ordinance fixes the price of any other advertising businesses—such as media placement agencies, classified advertisers, or Google—that provide restaurants with marketing services. For example, Google charges restaurants a commission to appear in search results, but the City has taken no steps to limit the amount of Google’s commissions. Nor has the City attempted to fix the prices of more traditional advertising that a restaurant may employ. New York City real estate prices are notoriously high, but the City has not capped the costs of billboards that restaurants may choose to rent for advertising purposes. 18 Stock Chart, SYSCO, https://bit.ly/3g56uLP (last visited Sept. 8, 2021); USFD Historical Data, NASDAQ, https://bit.ly/3z0yIix (last visited Sept. 8, 2021). Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 25 of 59 56 26 Yet, inexplicably and arbitrarily, the City has severely capped the commissions that restaurants choose to pay to advertise and promote their business on Plaintiffs’ platforms and receive additional services. 63. The specific limits imposed by the Local Law and Ordinance, bifurcated between 15% for delivery services and 5% for all other services (except credit card processing), have no rational basis. The City Council has not offered any (let alone a rational) explanation for these specific figures or their bifurcation. Upon information and belief, the City Council did not solicit or review any studies or data to understand the impact of these particular caps on New York City restaurants, couriers, and consumers. Nor, upon information and belief, did the City Council solicit or review any studies or data to understand the relationship between what platforms charge restaurants and restaurant profitability. Indeed, the City plans to conduct the first such review in 2023. C. New York Ends All Capacity Restrictions on Restaurants Imposed Due to the COVID-19 Pandemic 64. On or about May 19, 2021, then-Governor Cuomo ended capacity restrictions on most businesses, including restaurants, which could resume 100% full-capacity indoor dining. See Executive Order 202.108, Ex. F. On or about June 15, 2021, any remaining restrictions on indoor dining, such as social distancing, were lifted. 65. On or about June 24, 2021, the state of emergency declared in New York on March 7, 2020 expired. 66. Pursuant to the Local Law’s express terms, the commission cap was applicable only for the duration, plus 90 days, of a state of emergency that prohibits restaurants from operating at full capacity. All capacity restrictions were lifted on May 19, 2021, and the commission cap was therefore set to expire on August 17, 2021. Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 26 of 59 57 27 D. The City Council Extends Commission Caps Despite the Resumption of Indoor Dining and the Lack of Any Declared Emergency 67. On or about June 30, 2021, Council Members Moya and Gjonaj introduced Int. No. 2359, a bill amending the Local Law to make permanent the previously temporary commission caps imposed on third-party platforms. The proposed bill would omit subsection (c) from the Local Law, see supra ¶ 54, which tied the commission cap to the COVID-19 state of emergency and state-mandated capacity restrictions. 68. The plain-language summary of the bill stated: This bill would amend an existing law that prohibits third-party food delivery services - entities that provide restaurants with online order and delivery services - from charging any food service establishment more than 15% per order for delivery and more than 5% per order for all other fees only during certain time periods. This bill would instead prohibit such fees at all times.19 The summary made no reference to COVID-19, state-mandated capacity restrictions, or any emergency measures. 69. The bill was referred to the Committee on Small Business. On or around July 1, 2021, the Committee issued a report stating that “[e]ven though COVID-19 restrictions have been lifted in New York and City residents are able to dine-in at restaurants, the shift in consumer behavior may remain,” which includes increased takeout and delivery consumption. The July 1 report focuses on the increased revenues that third-party platforms purportedly incurred from increased consumer use during the COVID-19 pandemic lockdown, contrasted with the restaurant industry, which the report acknowledges was struggling well before the pandemic due, in part, to rent, labor, and inventory costs. The report explains that the City Council passed the Local Law 19 All legislative materials for Int. No. 2359 are available at https://on.nyc.gov/3A0cnCa, unless otherwise noted. Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 27 of 59 58 28 and other bills in response to the “financial devastation” to the restaurant industry that the pandemic had exacerbated. The report also claims that “[w]hile third-party delivery platforms provide restaurants a unique marketing and delivery service, small businesses have accused these platforms of acting in a predatory manner,” and concludes by stating that the Council “seeks to gain a better understanding of the impact” that the proposed permanent cap and other measures “will have on the restaurant industry and third-party platforms.” 70. On July 1, 2021, the Committee on Small Business debated Int. No. 2359, the proposed permanent commission cap. That hearing confirmed that the commission caps imposed by the Ordinance are not and were not intended to address a temporary state of emergency, but rather to economically benefit one group of businesses at the expense of another. During the July 1 hearing, Council Member Moya, who sponsored the Ordinance, explained its purpose as follows: For far too long, these third-party food delivery services knowingly and willingly took advantage of small business, and the pandemic highlighted this abuse. As one of the greatest cities in the world, we need to stand by our small business owners every single day. We cannot allow these companies to choose their profit margins over those of mom-and-pop shops and especially struggling by charging them fees for services they may not even be providing. As our small businesses begin to recover, we must prevent abuse like this from happening again. These companies from the onset had the opportunity to do what is right, so here’s their chance. We need to do everything we can to protect our mom-and-pop shops, the workers they employ, and our local economy. For these companies, it’s just another restaurant, but for us, in our neighborhoods, these restaurants are an integral part of the character of our community, and that’s why I introduced Intro 2359 to make these caps permanent. I will always stand by my small business owners over a billionaire-owned company any given day of the week . . . . 71. At the same meeting, Committee Chairman Mark Gjonaj attempted to focus on the purported relative profits and wealth of local restaurants and third-party platforms: The rise of third-party platforms is also apparent from their corporate strategies. Uber acquired delivery service Postmates in November 2020, and December 2020, Door Dash made its public market debut. Door Dash stock rose 86% during its initial public offering, one of the biggest IPOs of 2020 at a time when over [] 110,000 [restaurants] were closing across the country, including over 5000 in New Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 28 of 59 59 29 York City. The platforms were experiencing a dramatic increase in business, while the restaurants were seeing a depletion of their business. Chairman Gjonaj noted that the Ordinance “will ensure that restaurants have the tools that they need to succeed and survive the post-COVID world.” 72. The Council members in support of the Ordinance were indifferent to the many objections to the bill posed by representatives of the Department of Consumer and Worker Protection (“DCWP”), the Office of Special Enforcement (“OSE”), and business experts, among others: a. Christian Klossner, Executive Director of OSE stated: “[T]his is a very challenging law and it has potential for a number of unintended consequences.” b. DCWP stated: “[T]here is a potential concern certainly from DCWP’s end, we’re always very sensitive to this issue of the unintended consequence of when you cap profit margins for a particular business or entity, some of those cost[s] flowing down to consumers invariably, that’s a concern.” c. Ike Brannon, Senior Fellow at the Jack Kemp Foundation, explained that the “perspective that during the pandemic, to help restaurant[s], we had to cap these fees that food service companies were charging and this was somehow the best . . . is mistaken,” and warned of the impact. “In such situations as other witnesses have already said, platform companies often reduce their service . . . [in the] food delivery marketplace resulting in fewer opportunities for work, delivery drivers no[t] earning for those who rely on this business for a sizeable share of their income. That’s the research that[] I’ve done. It is a mistake to think that th[ese] caps help restaurants. . . . [T]hey don’t need a government to do this for them. They can increase prices on take out food on their own if Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 29 of 59 60 30 they want. . . . [T]here are multiple competitors in the food delivery market . . . restaurants are [not] forced to participate [in] this market. They can decline to participate or do this on their own.” d. Ryan Naples, Deputy Director of Tech NYC, an advocacy group representing more than 800 companies and organizations, also opposed the Ordinance as misguided, ineffective, and likely to be counterproductive. With the commission cap, the City was “attempting a silver bullet solution to a complex problem that is greatly affected by many issues such as commercial rent, increasing labor costs, and city fines and penalties,” and where “delivery platform fees [] are relatively minor” in comparison and would do nothing to address the larger areas of concern for restaurants. Mr. Naples explained that imposing “an artificial price cap[] will raise prices for customers ordering food . . . and as a result, will reduce the amount that customers order over time.” He warned that the commission cap “will have an effect on the ability of lower income New Yorkers to access food from home,” and “will [have a] negative impact [on] delivery platforms[’] ability to provide these services.” Ultimately, the commission cap “will not enable more restaurants to survive which is an important goal that we support. Instead, this short[sighted] solution will make ordering food more expensive for New Yorkers which will lead to an even greater contraction of the food delivery market.” e. Lisa Sorin, President of the Bronx Chamber of Commerce, noted that her organization represents “over 23,000 Bronx businesses ranging from micro and small business to large industry employers,” and expressed their opposition to Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 30 of 59 61 31 a permanent commission cap law. Ms. Sorin warned that “we cannot continue to overstep and over legislate business without a proper understand[ing] of our intended consequences.” “Mandating price caps of private industry is a very slippery slope. If this Bill goes through, what will stop the members from going through a list of private businesses and determining what they should and should not charge[?] Allowing this Bill to go through is another notice that New York City remains anti-business, that the city will mandate how businesses run and what pricing businesses can charge.” 73. In response to Ms. Sorin’s concerns about the negative impact of a commission cap, Chairman Gjonaj stated that “the reason we were looking [at] caps . . . is because there was a need to protect a very vital industry to this city.” 74. Also by July 1, 2021, the City Council had received written testimony from nearly 100 delivery couriers in New York City who use Plaintiffs’ platforms to earn their livelihoods, and who objected to the Ordinance as detrimental to their profession and counterproductive to the purported aim of the law to assist the restaurant industry. As one courier explained: The fees that companies like DoorDash charge restaurants go toward things like marketing and premium services for restaurants and go directly toward paying delivery couriers like myself and provide us with more support and safety protections. A permanent price control like this would have a direct, negative impact on my ability to earn money. Price controls will lead to higher prices for customers in New York City, and as prices rise, demand for restaurants and for the delivery services that I provide will go down. This is not something that I, or a lot of the people delivering on these platforms, can afford. Testimonials like these, including from single parents, primary caretakers, and single-income families who urged the City to find ways to support restaurants that do not also diminish their ability to earn incomes, were ignored. In pursuing these commission caps, the City Council ignored the workers. Delivery couriers are entitled to payment for their work, whether restaurants Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 31 of 59 62 32 pay those workers themselves for delivering their goods or opt to use a third-party platform and pay the workers through the accompanying commissions charged, which the platforms use to compensate couriers. The Ordinance does not account for that dynamic. Moreover, the City Council failed to acknowledge the vital work that Plaintiffs’ platforms provide to thousands of New York City residents as delivery couriers, the increase in pay that couriers have experienced without any corresponding impact on the costs to restaurants, and the plight facing these couriers should these platforms reduce or cease operations as a result of the commission cap imposed by the City. 75. When Amy Healy, Head of Government Affairs at Grubhub, explained that the Ordinance’s commission caps would force the company to “operate at a loss,” as it did in the previous quarter, Chairman Gjonaj openly justified the Ordinance as a measure to side with the local restaurants at the expense of out-of-state service providers: “The restaurant and eatery industry is a very vital part of this city, not only for the cuisine and it’s part of our actual culture, but they are actually a tax block, they contribute to the tax base of this city and [are a] huge employer for New Yorkers, and they’re an industry that we want to preserve and protect and ensure that they continue to thrive.” 76. Chairman Gjonaj then emphasized that Grubhub’s headquarters are in Chicago, Illinois, and asked Ms. Healy whether Grubhub paid New York taxes. He elaborated on the Ordinance’s openly discriminatory and unconstitutional basis: because New York restaurants pay New York taxes, “it’s more important that we protect them instead of . . . Grubhub or the other providers, I would hate [the] scenario of where a percentage of the sales transaction is leaving our city and going to a different state and not contributing to our tax base.” Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 32 of 59 63 33 77. On or around July 22, 2021, the goalposts moved yet again when the Committee proposed the Current Ordinance, a revision to Int. No. 2359 that extended the Local Law until February 17, 2022. This date has no stated or conceivable rational relationship to any public- health emergency and does not even purport to address public health concerns. 78. On or about July 29, 2021, the New York City Council voted in favor of the Current Ordinance, Int. No. 2359-A, to extend the Local Law until February 17, 2022. See Ex. A. Whereas the duration of the original Local Law’s price-fixing provision was expressly tied to the declared COVID-19 state of emergency and accompanying state-mandated capacity restrictions, the Ordinance omits all such references. 79. The Current Ordinance amends the Local Law by, among other things: (1) changing the name of Section 20-846 from “Fee limits during declared emergencies” to just “Fees”; and (2) swapping the duration of the law from “the period in which a state disaster emergency has been declared by the governor of the state of New York or a state of emergency has been declared by the mayor, such declaration is in effect in the city, and all food service establishments in the city are prohibited from operating at the maximum indoor occupancy and for a period of 90 days thereafter” to “until February 17, 2022”—an arbitrary date wholly divorced from the original pretextual justification for the law. 80. Both the Committee Report issued on July 29, 2021 and a hearing held on the same day confirm that the Ordinance is entirely untethered from the original emergency justification for the law. Like the July 1 report, the July 29 report makes broad statements about how consumer preferences may harm restaurants in the long term and therefore governmental intervention and protection are required. Citing to a 2019 pre-pandemic article, the July 29 report speculates that increased consumer use of delivery platforms may lead to shifts in consumer behavior, which could Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 33 of 59 64 34 mean that “the platforms may take the business of existing dine-in customers.” The report notes that the City Council conducted three oversight hearings “on the rise of third-party delivery platforms in the City,” two of which were pre-pandemic, during which it heard from small businesses and advocates who highlighted nonemergency-related concerns with platforms that allegedly existed long before the COVID-19 pandemic. The report makes no mention of public health or safety. 81. Although the Current Ordinance was amended to purportedly expire on a random date in February 2022, the clear intent of the Ordinance’s creators, Council Members Moya and Gjonaj, is to make the commission caps permanent (and they succeeded, see infra). And, according to these sponsors, the express justification for these caps is to favor local businesses at the expense of third-party (and out-of-state) delivery services like Plaintiffs. 82. During the July 29, 2021 Small Business Committee hearing, Council Member Moya continued to emphasize the purported profits of third-party platforms and reiterated that the City has “the opportunity and the responsibility to protect our mom-and-pop shops and ensure that they can survive, and not enable billion-dollar companies and their investors to continue getting richer at the expense of our restaurants.” Council Member Moya urged the City Council to “save [local restaurants] by permanently capping third-party delivery fees” and to not allow the Local Law’s temporary caps to expire. 83. At the same hearing, Chairman Gjonaj reiterated that even though restaurants now face fewer obstacles due to COVID-19, the City Council should intervene to protect the restaurant industry from changing consumer habits, i.e., their use of third-party delivery services: As the city has reopened and the dark days of the pandemic are hopefully behind us, the restaurant industry will begin to recover. Certain consumer habits may remain, however, that will make it more difficult for restaurants to succeed. Mainly consumers who become accustomed to ordering on third-party platforms that Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 34 of 59 65 35 charge a substantial fee per order for the marketing and delivery service they provide, may continue to use these platforms. . . . The package of Bill[s] we’re voting on today will ensure that restaurants have the tools that they need to succeed in the post-COVID world. . . . As the Chair of this committee, it has been my top priority to ensure that mom and pop shops, our micro-businesses remain the backbone of the city’s economy. 84. At the July 29 meeting, the Small Business Committee voted in favor of the Current Ordinance. On the same day, the City Council voted to adopt the Current Ordinance. 85. In voting against the Current Ordinance, Council Member Kalman Yeger explained that the justification for the original commission caps no longer applied—those caps “were for purposes of saving restaurants from the pandemic.” Instead, the Ordinance “interfere[s] with the constitutional obligations [and] contractual obligations of [ ] parties that have entered into arm’s length transactions.” 86. The City Council passed the Ordinance without any of the research or analysis required and necessary for such sweeping legislation. Upon information and belief, the City Council did not conduct (or ask anyone else to conduct) research or analysis regarding the potential effects of continued commission caps on consumers, restaurants, delivery couriers, third-party platforms generally or DoorDash, Grubhub, or Uber Eats’s platforms specifically, the local economy, or the relationship between the commissions paid by restaurants to third-party platforms and those restaurants’ revenues or profitability. Moreover, upon information and belief, the City Council did not conduct (or ask anyone else to conduct) research or analysis that would support a uniform, industry-wide cap. Similarly, upon information and belief, the City Council did not conduct (or ask anyone else to conduct) research or analysis regarding differences between third- party platforms that serve 20 or more restaurants and third-party platforms that serve fewer than 20 restaurants that would justify treating the two types of platforms differently. Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 35 of 59 66 36 87. Mayor de Blasio did not sign the Current Ordinance within 30 days of its passage, meaning that it became law on August 29, 2021 as Local Law 2021/094, and made retroactively effective as of August 17, 2021. E. The City Council Makes Commission Caps Permanent 88. On August 26, 2021, three days before the Current Ordinance became law, the Committee on Small Business held a meeting during which it passed the Pending Amendment, including Int. No. 2390, which removes the Ordinance’s sunset date altogether and thus makes it permanent, as its sponsors had long indicated they intended to do. See Ex. B. The bill also requires the Commissioner of Consumer and Worker Protection to conduct and issue a report, for the first time, in 2023 describing the effects of the Ordinance, and make “recommendations related to either the maintenance or adjustment of the [Ordinance].” During the August 26 meeting, the Committee also passed Int. No. 1897-A, which requires third-party platforms like Plaintiffs to comply with a robust licensing and record-keeping scheme complete with harsh penalties, including the possibility of a complete ban for platforms that commit merely two violations of any of the many provisions of the new regulatory scheme (and any rules promulgated thereunder) within two years. Ex. G. Int. No. 1897-A also transfers provisions regarding the regulation of third-party platforms (like the permanent commission caps in Int. No. 2390) from subchapter 22 to newly created subchapter 36. 89. The August 26 Committee Report betrays the unconstitutionality and irrationality behind the Pending Amendment.20 This report repeats much of the same content as the earlier July reports on the Current Ordinance, including those discussed supra, such as noting that “[e]ven 20 All legislative materials for Int. No. 2390 are available at https://on.nyc.gov/2VsiyzR, unless otherwise noted. All legislative materials for Int. No. 1897 are available at https://on.nyc.gov/2WZa1VT, unless otherwise noted. Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 36 of 59 67 37 before the pandemic, the costs to operate a restaurant in the City, including rent, labor and inventory, were high, leaving little room for added costs like platform commission fees.” And again, the report cites to pre-pandemic articles and reports, such as a 2017 report claiming that increased online delivery orders “pose[] the risk of cannibalization of dine-in customers.” But the August 26 report now reflects the sponsors’ animus towards large out-of-state businesses, expressly taking issue with “venture capital firms [that] invested huge sums of money in food delivery companies.” Once again, the report makes no mention of the public health or safety, because the express intent of the Ordinance is to favor local businesses, ostensibly since a small number of them have complained that delivery orders are not as profitable as dine-in orders (and without an even pretextual connection to marketing commissions). The report also cites to the Small Business Administration’s recognition of the benefits that delivery services provide, such as helping restaurants “stay relevant, stay noticeable, and be accessible to patrons.” 90. During the mere eight minutes it took the Committee on Small Business to pass the Pending Amendment (both Int. No. 2390 and Int. No. 1897-A), only Chairman Gjonaj spoke. He justified placing these burdensome regulations on third-party platforms by claiming, “[w]ith competition from larger chains and other small businesses to the high cost of a modest pay in rent, labor, and inventory costs in government regulations, consumer behavior changes in e-commerce, operating a restaurant at a profit is extremely challenging in this city.” Chairman Gjonaj continued to defend the City’s targeting of Plaintiffs for special government intervention by pointing to a 2016 pre-pandemic analysis by an online media company that claimed that the food delivery marketplace would be a profitable business. He then specifically singled out by name Plaintiffs DoorDash and Uber (both out-of-state businesses), noting that the former raised venture capital before going public, and lamented that delivery companies were “subsidized by Silicon Valley Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 37 of 59 68 38 money.” Chairman Gjonaj falsely asserted that “restaurants were being forced onto the platforms,” when, in fact, restaurants are fully free to contract with platforms, manage their delivery and marketing services themselves, or opt not to offer delivery services or engage in marketing campaigns at all, as they had done well before the emergence of online platforms like Plaintiffs’. After expressly noting that the Committee held multiple hearings on food platform delivery services before the pandemic, Chairman Gjonaj claimed that the Pending Amendment will “provide restaurants with the necessary protections.” He did not mention public health or safety, and he mentioned the pandemic only in passing, claiming that the perceived problems in the restaurant industry existed before COVID-19, that the pandemic “[im]proved the success of the delivery platforms,” and that consumers were likely to continue using the platforms in the future. 91. The Committee appears to have also ignored the April 29, 2020 written testimony submitted at an earlier Council meeting on commission caps, including testimony not only from the platforms, but from numerous platform delivery couriers who touted the benefits of the platforms and warned that the caps would ultimately reduce their earnings. For example, single mothers and other primary caretakers who make deliveries through Plaintiffs’ platforms praised the “flexibility” that delivery driving provided them, calling the freedom it afforded “critical” and “a blessing.” These delivery couriers stated that they would be “lost without these apps.” Other couriers praised the opportunities to earn a living that these delivery platforms provide to people of color and non-native English speakers. They urged the Committee to not pass the “arbitrary commission cap[s],” which would “make the cost of delivery go up in New York City,” and “have a direct and detrimental impact on [a courier’s] ability to earn income making deliveries.” 92. As had been the plan all along, on August 26, 2021, the full City Council moved the goalposts a third time when it passed the Pending Amendment (both Int. No. 2390 and Int. No. Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 38 of 59 69 39 1897-A). Under these bills, the permanent fee caps and overall licensing regime will be codified at N.Y.C. Admin. Code § 20-563, rather than the Current Ordinance’s placement at § 20-845 et seq. In justifying the Pending Amendment at the August 26 Council meeting, Council Member Moya said, “[w]e are not here to enable billion dollar companies and their investors to get rich at the expense of restaurants.” In keeping with the sponsors’ theme and flawed logic, he explained, “I’m proud . . . to protect the restaurant industry and its workers” by “ensuring that mom and pop shops have a real opportunity to . . . recover from this pandemic” through “limiting without expiration the fees charged to food service establishments by third-party food delivery services.” Council Member Moya further postured that “[b]usinesses also should not be pressured into accepting exorbitant fees in order to remain viable and competitive.” 93. But Council Member Moya ignored the fact that restaurants face no such external pressure, are entirely free to transact or not with whomever they wish, can opt to forego any delivery and marketing services, can choose to operate those services themselves, or may select from any number of other purveyors for such services. 94. Mayor de Blasio has not yet taken any action as to Int. No. 1897-A or Int. No. 2390. If he takes no action by September 25, 2021, each will become law. 95. Based on the complete legislative history of the Ordinance, including the sponsors’ attempts to pass a permanent cap before the COVID-19 pandemic, it is clear that the pandemic- related justifications were mere pretext; the law was always intended to permanently harm out-of- state, large delivery platforms like Plaintiffs. However, the Ordinance will harm not only Plaintiffs, but restaurants, consumers, and workers as well. Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 39 of 59 70 40 F. The Ordinance Targets and Irreparably Harms Plaintiffs, and Will Likely Harm Restaurants, Consumers, and Delivery Couriers Alike 96. Plaintiffs’ contracts with restaurants, including their fixed-percentage commission structures, have benefited restaurants before, during, and after the COVID-19 pandemic by streamlining their operations and enlarging their consumer bases to include consumers who: (1) never would have known about or chosen the restaurant but for Plaintiffs’ platforms and marketing efforts; (2) otherwise would have eaten at the restaurant in person but could not do so under PAUSE orders; and (3) would not have eaten at the restaurant in person but choose to purchase food for delivery or takeout. 97. Although third-party platform costs are just one of the many costs incurred by restaurants, the Ordinance does not set prices or otherwise limit any other vendor’s pricing. For example, the Ordinance does not provide restaurants any relief from prices charged by raw ingredient suppliers, equipment suppliers, online reservation services, or other advertising or marketing services providers. Instead, the Ordinance regulates just a small subset of the third parties with which restaurants contract, even though Plaintiffs are the vendors that actually help restaurants increase their volume and customer base. 98. The Ordinance will likely constrain the services that Plaintiffs can offer. In order to offset the revenue lost due to lower commissions with restaurants, Plaintiffs could be forced to increase the fees they charge consumers who place orders, or reduce the scope of the services provided to restaurants and consumers alike. As described below, forced compliance with the Ordinance would irreparably harm New York City restaurants, delivery couriers, and consumers. 99. The Ordinance will likely have the perverse result of harming the businesses that it purportedly intends to help, as was argued by numerous interested and impartial parties during the hearings debating the Ordinance and in written testimony submitted to the City Council. Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 40 of 59 71 41 100. Moreover, the Ordinance will irreparably harm Plaintiffs and other third-party platforms. The City’s commission caps have cost Plaintiffs hundreds of millions of dollars through July 2021. The ongoing violation of Plaintiffs’ constitutional rights constitutes irreparable harm, as does the Ordinance’s deleterious effect on Plaintiffs’ reputations, goodwill, and business models. For example, the Ordinance will likely require Plaintiffs to: a. Renegotiate contracts with many restaurants (or be forced to abandon their rights under those contracts), because many existing contracts contemplate prices for delivery services or marketing and other services that exceed the amounts permitted by the Ordinance, and for which the caps will not allow Plaintiffs to even be able to cover their costs; b. Scale back certain services, including marketing and promotional services in the City, resulting in fewer earning opportunities for delivery couriers and eliminating the benefits such as innovation and tailored service packages that competition in the platform market previously provided for restaurants and consumers; c. Terminate contracts with existing restaurant partners, decline to enter into new contracts with prospective restaurant partners, and/or place limits on consumer order size or location; and d. Raise consumer-facing fees, causing further harm to Plaintiffs’ reputations and goodwill in the City. Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 41 of 59 72 42 FIRST CAUSE OF ACTION (Declaratory Relief, Injunctive Relief, and Damages for Violation of the Contract Clause of the United States Constitution (42 U.S.C. § 1983)) 101. Plaintiffs reallege and incorporate herein by reference Paragraphs 1 through 100 above. 102. The Ordinance violates Article I, Section 10 of the United States Constitution, which prohibits state and local governments from “pass[ing] any . . . Law impairing the Obligation of Contracts.” The Contract Clause “limits . . . the power of a State to abridge existing contractual relationships, even in the exercise of its otherwise legitimate police power.” See Allied Structure Steel Co. v. Spannaus, 438 U.S. 234, 242 (1978). This is because “[c]ontracts enable individuals to order their personal and business affairs according to their particular needs and interests. Once arranged, those rights and obligations are binding under the law, and the parties are entitled to rely on them.” Id. at 245. 103. The Ordinance operates as a substantial impairment of Plaintiffs’ contractual relationships with restaurants. Plaintiffs long ago entered into voluntary contractual relationships with many New York City restaurants. Those contracts included fixed-percentage commissions on which both parties relied, and both parties planned their expenditures accordingly. Such reliance on the commission rate was vital to the contracting parties. Plaintiffs’ compliance with the City’s temporary commission cap, the duration of which was tied to emergency public health measures (at extraordinary cost to Plaintiffs), does not undermine their expectation that their original bargained-for commission rates with restaurants would return after the end of the public- health emergency. 104. The Ordinance is intended to favor one subset of the public—restaurant owners— rather than the public at large. The reality, however, is that restaurants and the public will likely Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 42 of 59 73 43 be harmed if third-party platforms like Plaintiffs modify their operations in New York City in compliance with the Ordinance, including if those platforms seek additional revenue from consumers to counteract the permanent decrease in commissions as a result of the Ordinance. 105. The Ordinance does not advance a significant or legitimate public purpose. It does not further the public health or safety. It does not respond to an ongoing public-health threat. And far from promoting the general welfare, it engages in ill-conceived economic protectionism that is counterproductive to achieving its stated, illegitimate purpose. 106. The adjustment of the rights and responsibilities of the contracting parties is neither based upon reasonable conditions nor of a character appropriate to the public purpose allegedly justifying the legislation’s adoption. It is not reasonable to continue to interfere with the ability of third-party platforms like Plaintiffs to charge the rates to which both the platforms and restaurants contractually agreed—especially when the express purpose of such interference is economic protectionism of one party at the other’s expense. Nor is it reasonable to continually extend the duration of this price-fixing law (now made permanent), especially beyond the expiration of any public-health emergency and accompanying restrictions. The Ordinance has undermined the benefit of the bargain for third-party platforms like Plaintiffs, interfered with the parties’ reasonable expectations, and prevented third-party platforms like Plaintiffs from safeguarding their rights. Restaurants had a choice in whether to enter into contracts with third-party platforms at all, and if they did, with which platforms specifically. Many restaurants facilitate their own delivery to customers using their own couriers, including by operating their own websites and taking orders by telephone. Providing these services directly to customers entails costs and inconveniences to both restaurants and customers. Restaurants would likely have to pay additional delivery staff, devote staff to manage telephone orders, or pay to develop their own comprehensive Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 43 of 59 74 44 website. Restaurants that choose to use third-party platforms have decided that the relationship is mutually beneficial and valuable to their customers. 107. The unreasonableness of the government’s interference is magnified by the City’s recent budget surplus and the availability of other lawful governmental methods to aid restaurants. 108. The City, as a municipality, may be held liable for this violation of the United States Constitution under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Monell v. Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 436 U.S. 658, 694 (1978) (establishing that municipal liability under Section 1983 arises where the municipality has undertaken an official policy or custom which causes an unconstitutional deprivation of the plaintiff’s rights). 109. In enacting the Ordinance, the City acted under color of state law and pursuant to an official policy or custom. 110. The City’s unconstitutional conduct proximately caused Plaintiffs’ injuries. 111. A bona fide and actual controversy exists between Plaintiffs and the City in that Plaintiffs allege, and the City denies, that the enactment of the Ordinance violated the Contract Clause of the United States Constitution. 112. Plaintiffs desire a judicial determination of the validity of the Ordinance to save themselves from the harm caused by the enactment of the Ordinance, which deprives Plaintiffs of the benefit of their existing contracts with restaurants. The enactment of the Ordinance results in substantial hardship to Plaintiffs. 113. A judicial determination of the invalidity of the Ordinance is necessary and appropriate to avoid the deprivation of federal constitutional rights that results from applying the Ordinance to Plaintiffs and other third-party platforms. Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 44 of 59 75 45 114. In light of the violation of the Contract Clause of the United States Constitution, Plaintiffs further seek injunctive relief against enforcement of the Ordinance. 115. In light of the violation of the Contract Clause of the United States Constitution, Plaintiffs further seek monetary damages. SECOND CAUSE OF ACTION (Declaratory Relief, Injunctive Relief, and Damages for Violation of the Takings Clause of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution (42 U.S.C. § 1983); Declaratory and Injunctive Relief for Violation of Article I, Section 7 of the New York Constitution (Takings)) 116. Plaintiffs reallege and incorporate herein by reference Paragraphs 1 through 115 above. 117. The federal and state Constitutions prohibit the government from taking private property “without just compensation.” U.S. Const. amend. V; N.Y. Const. art. I, § 7. Contracts constitute property within the meaning of the Fifth Amendment and are susceptible to a “taking” within the meaning of the Takings Clause. See Lynch v. United States, 292 U.S. 571, 579 (1934); Ruckelshaus v. Monsanto Co., 467 U.S. 986, 1003 (1984). Thus, the City may not deprive Plaintiffs of the benefits of their contractual property rights without prior and just compensation. 118. The Ordinance substantially impairs Plaintiffs’ fundamental property rights in their contracts with restaurants without prior and just compensation to Plaintiffs. A typical contract between Plaintiffs and a restaurant includes a commission whereby the restaurant agrees to pay Plaintiffs a certain percentage of the price of the consumer’s order. Plaintiffs have contracts with thousands of restaurants in New York City. 119. The Current Ordinance extended (and now has made permanent through the Pending Amendment) the 15% cap on delivery commissions that third-party platforms can charge restaurants, and the 5% cap on all other commissions except credit card processing, including for Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 45 of 59 76 46 marketing services. Most of Plaintiffs’ contracts with restaurants include commission rates greater than what the Ordinance allows. When the City initially capped commissions in May 2020, Plaintiffs temporarily reduced those commissions in the spirit of comity during the public-health emergency (despite believing that even the temporary commission cap was unconstitutional). The Ordinance now permanently extends the already-unconstitutional cap, continues to substantially diminish the economic value of Plaintiffs’ contracts, and continues to prevent Plaintiffs from obtaining reasonable returns on their investments and the agreed-upon revenues that they otherwise would obtain in a competitive industry. 120. The taking of Plaintiffs’ property is not for any valid public purpose and the Ordinance does not substantially advance a closely and legitimately connected government interest. The Ordinance goes too far in its regulation of Plaintiffs’ property rights, and the economic harm it causes should be compensated by the government rather than remain disproportionately borne by Plaintiffs without just compensation. The City has interfered with Plaintiffs’ legitimate and reasonable investment-backed expectations in their contracts with restaurants to such a degree that the Ordinance is the functional equivalent of government appropriation without just compensation. 121. The City may be held liable for this violation of the United States Constitution under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. 122. In enacting the Ordinance, the City acted under color of state law and pursuant to an official policy or custom. 123. The City’s unconstitutional conduct proximately caused Plaintiffs’ injuries. 124. A bona fide and actual controversy exists between Plaintiffs and the City in that Plaintiffs allege, and the City denies, that the enactment of the Ordinance violated Article I, Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 46 of 59 77 47 Section 7 of the New York Constitution and the Takings Clause of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. 125. Plaintiffs desire a judicial determination of the validity of the Ordinance to save themselves from the harm caused by the enactment of the Ordinance, which deprives Plaintiffs of the benefit of their longstanding contracts with restaurants. The enactment of the Ordinance results in substantial hardship to Plaintiffs. 126. A judicial determination of the invalidity of the Ordinance is necessary and appropriate to avoid the deprivation of federal and state constitutional rights that results from applying the Ordinance to Plaintiffs and other third-party platforms. 127. In light of the violation of Article I, Section 7 of the New York Constitution and the Takings Clause of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution, Plaintiffs further seek injunctive relief against enforcement of the Ordinance. The ongoing violation of Plaintiffs’ constitutional rights constitutes irreparable harm, as does the Ordinance’s long-term deleterious effect on Plaintiffs’ reputations, goodwill, and business models. 128. In light of the violation of the Takings Clause of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution, Plaintiffs further seek monetary damages. THIRD CAUSE OF ACTION (Declaratory and Injunctive Relief for Violation of Article IX, Section 2(c) of the New York Constitution, New York Municipal Home Rule Law Section 10(ii)(a)(12), and New York General City Law Section 20(13) (Police Power)) 129. Plaintiffs reallege and incorporate herein by reference Paragraphs 1 through 128 above. 130. Contained within the New York Constitution and state statutes are limitations on the City’s right to exercise police power, i.e., to enact laws for the safety, health, well-being, and welfare of its residents. A City exceeds its police power where an ordinance “bears no relation to Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 47 of 59 78 48 the welfare of the public, but is designed for the convenience and interest of a special class.” Cohen, 272 N.Y. at 322. 131. The Ordinance exceeds the City’s police power because it does not promote the public health, safety, or general welfare of the public at large. It does not seek to benefit all New York City workers or businesses. Nor is the Ordinance directed at any form of price gouging. Instead, the Ordinance aims to advance the narrow interests of certain restaurants—those with contracts with Plaintiffs and other platforms where the restaurants agreed to pay commissions greater than what the Ordinance allows—at the expense of others, including consumers who may be adversely affected by higher charges, restaurants who may lose the option of using Plaintiffs’ services, and couriers who may lose out on delivery opportunities. 132. Prior to the Local Law and Ordinance, Plaintiffs’ contracts with restaurants across the City routinely entailed total commissions greater than what the Ordinance allows in order to cover the costs of their services and to help restaurants meet the demand for such services across the City. Those costs extend well beyond facilitating delivery services, and include things like marketing, order-taking, technology and product development, and customer service, which the Ordinance caps at a 5% commission rate. 133. The Ordinance harms the general public by making food ordering and delivery platform services less economically viable, thereby reducing or eliminating the availability of food delivery services in New York City, or forcing an increase in the fees that Plaintiffs and other food delivery services must charge consumers to offset the loss of revenue imposed by the Ordinance. 134. Third-party platforms are not so essential to the public health or safety that they should be treated akin to public utilities, and there is no legitimate reason for the City to impose an industry-wide price control. Further, the Ordinance does not provide a method by which Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 48 of 59 79 49 Plaintiffs can be guaranteed a fair return on their investments going forward, such as an upward adjustment procedure, as is the case with utilities (which also have geographic monopolies, unlike Plaintiffs). 135. There is no justification for a price-fixing ordinance that does not benefit the public health, safety, or general welfare. What is worse, the Ordinance’s price fixing cannot even purportedly be justified as a response to the COVID-19 (or any other) emergency. 136. The Ordinance’s attempt at economic protectionism would not be justified even if the City had engaged in studies about the Ordinance’s likely effects. But the City did not engage in any type of analysis that would be expected of similar price-fixing legislation, such as in the utility context. Upon information and belief, the City has not conducted (or asked anyone else to conduct) research or analysis regarding: (1) an extended commission cap’s potential effect on consumers, restaurants, third-party platforms, or the local economy; (2) why any cap should be uniform industry-wide; or (3) any differences between third-party platforms that serve 20 or more restaurants and third-party platforms that serve fewer than 20 restaurants that would justify treating the two types of platforms differently under the Current Ordinance. 137. The Ordinance does not cap prices on any other goods or services restaurants utilize, such as supply and equipment providers, point-of-sale vendors, online reservation services, or other marketing services like Google, Facebook, or Twitter. Rather, it caps only commissions charged by certain large third-party platforms. There is no permissible justification for singling out third-party platforms, especially when the price fixing is not related to the public health, safety, or welfare. 138. A bona fide and actual controversy exists between Plaintiffs and the City in that Plaintiffs allege, and the City denies, that the enactment of the Ordinance violated Article IX, Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 49 of 59 80 50 Section 2(c) of the New York Constitution and related statutes that set the limits of municipal police power. 139. Plaintiffs desire a judicial determination of the validity of the Ordinance to save themselves from the harm caused by the enactment of the Ordinance, which deprives Plaintiffs of the benefit of their longstanding contracts with restaurants. The enactment of the Ordinance results in substantial hardship to Plaintiffs. 140. A judicial determination of the invalidity of the Ordinance is necessary and appropriate to avoid the deprivation of state constitutional and statutory rights that results from applying the Ordinance to Plaintiffs and other third-party platforms. 141. In light of the violation of Article IX, Section 2(c) of the New York Constitution and related statutes, Plaintiffs further seek injunctive relief against enforcement of the Ordinance. The ongoing violation of Plaintiffs’ constitutional rights constitutes irreparable harm, as does the Ordinance’s long-term deleterious effect on Plaintiffs’ reputations, goodwill, and business models. FOURTH CAUSE OF ACTION (Declaratory Relief, Injunctive Relief, and Damages for Violation of the Due Process Clause of the United States Constitution (42 U.S.C. § 1983); Declaratory and Injunctive Relief for Violation of Article I, Section 6 of the New York Constitution (Due Process)) 142. Plaintiffs reallege and incorporate herein by reference Paragraphs 1 through 141 above. 143. The Ordinance violates the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and the Due Process Clause of Article I, Section 6 of the New York Constitution because it imposes an irrational and arbitrary direct and permanent cap on third-party platforms’ ability to generate the revenue needed to cover their expenses, and instead provides preferential economic treatment to certain restaurants at the direct expense of these platforms. Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 50 of 59 81 51 144. Businesses have a constitutionally protected interest in operating free from unreasonable governmental interference, and are also protected from excessive and unreasonable government conduct intentionally directed toward them. The Ordinance lacks a reasonable and nondiscriminatory legislative purpose. It has no (let alone a substantial) relation to the public health, safety, or general welfare. The continued cap cannot be justified as an emergency response (nor does it purport to be). Favoring a specific industry or subset of an industry at the expense of another is not a legitimate legislative purpose. 145. There is also no rational basis for capping commissions without adequately compensating third-party delivery services. See N.Y. State Land Title Ass’n v. N.Y. State Dep’t of Fin. Servs., 169 A.D.3d 18, 32 (1st Dep’t 2019) (finding no rational basis for capping fees at an “arbitrary, across-the-board percentage figure” where the government’s argument that regulated parties would “be adequately compensated” was “conclusory” and lacked “empirical documentation, assessment and evaluation”). 146. Both the content and context of the Ordinance demonstrate that it is confiscatory in nature and intended to harm third-party platforms like Plaintiffs, essentially forcing them to subsidize certain restaurants’ profit margins by continuing to cap their ability to charge reasonable and competitive commissions for their services—a cap now rendered permanent. 147. Moreover, any invocation of the COVID-19 emergency is clearly pretext. New York City lawmakers have stated that a commission cap was necessary prior to the pandemic: Council Member Moya introduced permanent commission cap legislation before any state of emergency was declared. And the City has extended the commission cap despite the end of the COVID-19 state of emergency. The repeal of the COVID-19-based sunset provision (and any sunset provision at all under the Pending Amendment) underscores the lack of any connection Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 51 of 59 82 52 between a commission cap and any public-health emergency, exacerbating the due process violation. 148. The unreasonable interference with Plaintiffs’ businesses that the Ordinance imposes, coupled with the pretext under which it was enacted and the negative effects on the restaurant industry and customers that will result from the Ordinance, demonstrates that the Ordinance is arbitrary and irrational, without any conceivable legitimate rational basis, and was enacted in violation of due process. Indeed, the Ordinance will undermine the City’s own supposed purpose of assisting restaurants because it will likely drive up consumer costs, drive down deliveries, and thus negatively impact consumers, couriers, and restaurants. 149. The City may be held liable for this violation of the United States Constitution under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. 150. In enacting the Ordinance, the City acted under color of state law and pursuant to an official policy or custom. 151. The City’s unconstitutional conduct proximately caused Plaintiffs’ injuries. 152. A bona fide and actual controversy exists between Plaintiffs and the City in that Plaintiffs allege, and the City denies, that the enactment of the Ordinance violated Article I, Section 6 of the New York Constitution and the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. 153. Plaintiffs desire a judicial determination of the validity of the Ordinance to save themselves from the harm caused by the enactment of the Ordinance, which deprives Plaintiffs of the benefit of their longstanding contracts with restaurants. The enactment of the Ordinance results in substantial hardship to Plaintiffs. Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 52 of 59 83 53 154. A judicial determination of the invalidity of the Ordinance is necessary and appropriate to avoid the deprivation of federal and state constitutional rights that results from applying the Ordinance to Plaintiffs and other third-party platforms. 155. In light of the violation of Article I, Section 6 of the New York Constitution and the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, Plaintiffs further seek injunctive relief against enforcement of the Ordinance. The ongoing violation of Plaintiffs’ constitutional rights constitutes irreparable harm, as does the Ordinance’s long-term deleterious effect on Plaintiffs’ reputations, goodwill, and business models. 156. In light of the violation of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, Plaintiffs further seek monetary damages. FIFTH CAUSE OF ACTION (Declaratory Relief, Injunctive Relief, and Damages for Violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the United States Constitution (42 U.S.C. § 1983); Declaratory and Injunctive Relief for Violation of Article I, Section 11 of the New York Constitution (Equal Protection)) 157. Plaintiffs reallege and incorporate herein by reference Paragraphs 1 through 156 above. 158. The Ordinance violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, which requires that the reason for treating two groups differently be rationally related to a legitimate government interest. 159. The Ordinance imposes an irrational and arbitrary direct permanent cap on Plaintiffs’ and certain third-party platforms’ ability to generate the revenue needed to cover their expenses, and instead provides preferential economic treatment to certain restaurants at the direct expense of third-party platforms, which is not a reasonable and nondiscriminatory legislative purpose. Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 53 of 59 84 54 160. Third-party platforms and other businesses operating in the City are similarly situated, yet the Ordinance prohibits the ability of one class (third-party delivery platforms) to freely contract with restaurants with regard to facilitating the order and delivery of food and beverages from restaurants to consumers and providing marketing and other services, while it does not fix the price of any other business with which restaurants transact, such as raw ingredient suppliers, equipment suppliers, point-of-sale system vendors, online reservation platforms, or other advertising providers. 161. The Ordinance is irrational, arbitrary, and discriminatory for a second reason: the Current Ordinance caps the commissions of third-party platforms that serve “no fewer than 20 food service establishments located in the city that are owned and operated by different persons,” but not those that serve fewer than 20 such establishments. N.Y.C. Admin. Code § 20-845. The City has not provided any (let alone a rational) basis for this distinction other than naked animus against larger, out-of-state businesses. Small third-party platforms are permitted to charge whatever commission they want under the Current Ordinance. The Current Ordinance seems specifically intended to carve out such groups and provide them with a competitive advantage to the detriment of larger businesses like Plaintiffs. 162. Moreover, the Ordinance will undermine the City’s own supposed purpose of assisting restaurants because it will drive up consumer costs, drive down deliveries, and thus negatively impact consumers, couriers, and restaurants. 163. For substantially the same reasons, the Ordinance violates Article I, Section 11 of the New York Constitution. 164. The City may be held liable for this violation of the United States Constitution under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 54 of 59 85 55 165. In enacting the Ordinance, the City acted under color of state law and pursuant to an official policy or custom. 166. The City’s unconstitutional conduct proximately caused Plaintiffs’ injuries. 167. A bona fide and actual controversy exists between Plaintiffs and the City in that Plaintiffs allege, and the City denies, that the enactment of the Ordinance violated the Equal Protection Clauses of the United States and New York Constitutions. 168. Plaintiffs desire a judicial determination of the validity of the Ordinance to save themselves from the harm caused by the enactment of the Ordinance, which deprives Plaintiffs of the benefit of their longstanding contracts with restaurants. The enactment of the Ordinance results in substantial hardship to Plaintiffs. 169. A judicial determination of the invalidity of the Ordinance is necessary and appropriate to avoid the deprivation of federal and state constitutional rights that results from applying the Ordinance to Plaintiffs and other third-party platforms. 170. In light of the violation of Equal Protection Clauses of the United States and New York Constitutions, Plaintiffs further seek injunctive relief against enforcement of the Ordinance. The ongoing violation of Plaintiffs’ constitutional rights constitutes irreparable harm, as does the Ordinance’s long-term deleterious effect on Plaintiffs’ reputations, goodwill, and business models. 171. In light of the violation of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, Plaintiffs further seek monetary damages. SIXTH CAUSE OF ACTION (Declaratory Relief, Injunctive Relief, and Damages for Violation of the Dormant Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution (42 U.S.C. § 1983)) 172. Plaintiffs reallege and incorporate herein by reference Paragraphs 1 through 171 above. Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 55 of 59 86 56 173. The Current Ordinance discriminates against interstate commerce on its face. 174. The Ordinance has the purpose and effect of discriminating against, and imposing a substantial burden on, interstate commerce. 175. DoorDash, Grubhub, and Uber Eats are all incorporated and headquartered outside of New York, yet they fall within the Current Ordinance’s definition of “third-party food delivery service,” i.e., “any website, mobile application or other internet service that offers or arranges for the sale of food and beverages prepared by, and the same-day delivery or same-day pickup of food and beverages from, no fewer than 20 food service establishments located in the city that are owned and operated by different persons.” N.Y.C. Admin. Code § 20-845. 176. Smaller local third-party delivery companies serving 20 or fewer restaurants are free to charge whatever commissions they wish. Thus, the Current Ordinance creates a discriminatory market, enabling local services to gain a larger share of the total sales in the market than that of larger out-of-state service providers that comprise the entire, or nearly entire, class of entities subject to the Current Ordinance’s regulation. The Current Ordinance is a “straightforward attempt[] to discriminate in favor of local” businesses prohibited by the Dormant Commerce Clause doctrine. Granholm v. Heald, 544 U.S. 460, 489 (2005). 177. The City Council has admitted its unconstitutional motive. Indeed, Chairman Gjonaj asked a Grubhub representative whether Grubhub paid New York taxes, and explained that because New York restaurants pay New York taxes “it’s more important that we protect them instead of . . . Grubhub or the other providers, I would hate [the] scenario of where a percentage of the sales transaction is leaving our city and going to a different state and not contributing to our tax base.” And Council Member Gjonaj has made clear that the Ordinance and its prior variants were precursors to “pass[ing] the full set of bills that were introduced earlier this year on Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 56 of 59 87 57 the primary relief to small mom and pop shops just looking for their fair playing field and use the service of these venture capital backed Silicon Valley Tech behemoths.” The City Council followed through on that promise in passing the Pending Amendment. 178. The Current Ordinance facially discriminates against out-of-state industry actors by shifting the costs of regulation onto them, thus favoring local interests—which is a per se violation of the Dormant Commerce Clause doctrine. Moreover, the Ordinance places a burden on interstate commerce that clearly outweighs the minimal, if any, local benefits, as, upon information and belief, the vast majority of online delivery orders are placed through third-party food delivery platforms located out-of-state. See Am. Booksellers Found. v. Dean, 342 F.3d 96, 102 (2d Cir. 2003). 179. The City had “other means to advance” its “local interest,” C&A Carbone, Inc. v. Town of Clarkstown, 511 U.S. 383, 392 (1994), but chose not to use those other nondiscriminatory means, which could have included workable alternatives such as a loan program, tax breaks, rental assistance, or other economic interventions. 180. The City may be held liable for this violation of the United States Constitution under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. 181. In enacting the Ordinance, the City acted under color of state law and pursuant to an official policy or custom. 182. The City’s unconstitutional conduct proximately caused Plaintiffs’ injuries. 183. A bona fide and actual controversy exists between Plaintiffs and the City in that Plaintiffs allege, and the City denies, that the enactment of the Ordinance violates the Dormant Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution. Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 57 of 59 88 58 184. Plaintiffs desire a judicial determination of the validity of the Ordinance to save themselves from the harm caused by the enactment of the Ordinance, which deprives Plaintiffs of the benefit of their longstanding contracts with restaurants. The enactment of the Ordinance results in substantial hardship to Plaintiffs. 185. A judicial determination of the invalidity of the Ordinance is necessary and appropriate to avoid the deprivation of federal constitutional rights that results from applying the Ordinance to Plaintiffs and other third-party platforms. 186. In light of the violation of the Dormant Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution, Plaintiffs further seek injunctive relief against enforcement of the Ordinance. The ongoing violation of Plaintiffs’ constitutional rights constitutes irreparable harm, as does the Ordinance’s long-term deleterious effect on Plaintiffs’ reputations, goodwill, and business models. 187. In light of the violation of the Dormant Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution, Plaintiffs further seek monetary damages. PRAYER FOR RELIEF WHEREFORE, Plaintiffs respectfully request that this Court enter judgment in Plaintiffs’ favor and grant the following relief: 1. A declaration that the Ordinance violates provisions of the United States Constitution and the New York Constitution; 2. Just compensation, according to proof, for taking of property; 3. An award of damages against the City according to proof; 4. A permanent injunction enjoining the City from enforcing the Ordinance facially or as applied against Plaintiffs; 5. An award of fees, costs, expenses, and disbursements, including attorneys’ fees to which Plaintiffs are entitled pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988 and other applicable law; and Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 58 of 59 89 59 6. Such other and further relief as the Court deems just and proper. DEMAND FOR JURY TRIAL Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 38, Plaintiffs demand a trial by jury in this action of all issues so triable. Dated: New York, New York September 9, 2021 GIBSON, DUNN & CRUTCHER LLP By: /s/ Anne Champion Anne Champion 200 Park Avenue, 47th Floor New York, NY 10166-0193 Telephone: (212) 351-4000 AChampion@gibsondunn.com Joshua S. Lipshutz (PHV forthcoming) 1050 Connecticut Ave. NW Washington, DC 20036-5306 Telephone: (202) 955-8500 JLipshutz@gibsondunn.com Attorneys for Plaintiffs DoorDash, Inc., Grubhub Inc., and Portier, LLC Case 1:21-cv-07564 Document 1 Filed 09/09/21 Page 59 of 59 90 Delivery Fees Door Dash Uber 91 Delivery Co-Op Restaurant veterans in Lexington, Kentucky, for example, established a subscription-based model in summer 2020 with Delivery Co-op. Currently, eight restaurants pay $300 per month to participate, while around 400 customers pay $25 a month to use the delivery service with no extra fees. Those funds go toward operating costs and over $20 per hour for drivers, who are full-time employees of the company. After three months on the job, drivers are eligible for medical insurance, and after one year, they qualify for profit-sharing options. Grubhub The commission rate of Grubhub to restaurants is a flat fee of 4.5% of the total order price. Grubhub also charges restaurants 2.5% to 7% of orders that generate less than $20 in sales. Feb 22, 2022. Grubhub takes 15% of the total order price, plus 15% of the estimated tip, as it’s known in the industry. This accounts for most of their revenue. However, Grubhub also collects a 5% fee on credit card transactions and a $0.99 fee for every order that’s placed through the company’s website or app. The basic business model is to sell advertising to restaurants that use Grubhub’s service. Therefore, it charges restaurants 20% of the order’s total value. Grubhub’s customers are primarily restaurants, not consumers. Nonetheless, the company generates most of its revenue from advertising. Grubhub charges a 10% delivery fee for each order from both the customer and the restaurant. Grubhub charges $0.30 and 3.05% as a processing fee for placing an order through the platform. Chownow Order Better – 12% Chownow Marketplace – 2.95% credit card fee = $0.15 Chownow Direct - $139/month plus 2.95% credit card fee = $0.15 Postmates https://www.tomsguide.com/best-picks/best-food-delivery-services 92 Economic Development Commission Item May 10, 2022 Subject Review 2022 Work Program Section DISCUSSION ITEMS Item No: C.2 Prepared By Bob Generous, Senior Planner File No: SUMMARY At the last meeting a commissioner requested that the 2022 Work Program be discussed. BACKGROUND At the March 9, 2022, Economic Development Commission meeting the Commission approved a work program for the year. DISCUSSION RECOMMENDATION Review and revise work program. ATTACHMENTS Memo 2021 Year and 2022 Work Plan 93 MEMORANDUM TO:Economic Development Commission FROM:Bob Generous, Senior Planner DATE:March 9, 2022 SUBJ:2021 Year in Review and 2022 Recommended Work Plan BACKGROUND As required by the City Code section 2-46.13 (e) Reports: The Commission will produce an annual report for the City Council detailing the community development activities of the past year. The report also provides a summary of residential and commercial construction activities and outlines the progress that has been made toward achieving the goals of all strategic plans. The Economic Development Commission (EDC) is an advisory body to the City Council and the Economic Development Authority charged with the responsibility of researching, reviewing, and making recommendations on issues related to economic development. The EDC will review ways in which the City can expand existing businesses, attract desirable new business, and revitalize existing businesses and the community as a whole. Below is a summary of items the EDC reviewed in 2020 as well as possible work projects for 2021 2021 REVIEW In 2021, the City issued building permits for 208 dwelling units, which was approximately 104 percent of our projected housing growth for 2021. We are projecting a two percent (2%) increase (approximately 200 units) in total housing stock for 2022. As can be seen in the average residential building permit data (72 single-family and 50 attached units), there is currently sufficient approved single-family residential lots available for development with a lot inventory of 92 platted single-family lots, but a deficiency of attached single-family lots with 14 lots available. With the approval of the Lake Place at Powers Ridge project, 110 apartment units were approved for development of which 50 units will be affordable. The Economic Development Commission had the following work program for 2021: 94 2021 Year in Review & 2022 Recommended Work Plan March 9, 2022 Page 2 Develop a strategic plan for economic development for the city. This item was started, with the EDC reviewing City strengths and weaknesses (3/9/21 and 4/11/21), but with the City Council adoption of a Strategic Plan (6/8/21 presentation) for the City, it was not finished as a separate item. Cooperate and coordinate with Buy Chanhassen and the Southwest Area Chamber of Commerce on promoting business retention, expansion and recruitment to Chanhassen. Vernelle Clayton discussed the Lodging Tax and Visitors bureau with the EDC (1/12/21). Create a feedback survey for developers and business owners to be used to understand and improve City interaction with the development and business community. Still a desired outcome (6/8/21). We had Ari Lyksette, Communication Manager, discuss communications initiatives and opportunities through the City (10/12/21). Jake Foster, Assistant City Manager, also presented communication options the City was reviewing (1/12/21). Investigate a signage idea/plan for the promotion of businesses in the downtown. This morphed into preliminary discussions regarding revisions to the City’s sign ordinance (10/12/21), which will come back in 2022. Work with the school district and Chanhassen businesses to market job opportunities and support the creation of local jobs. Not pursued. Financial Incentives. The EDC discussed elements of providing Sewer Availability Charge (SAC) credits. City Code Staff shall submit City Code amendments to the EDC for comments relative to economic development, Food Trucks (5/11/21). A preliminary discussion of sign code amendments was presented to the EDC (10/12/21). Specific ordinance changes will be presented to the EDC for review and comment. Educational Opportunities The Commission investigated various economic development programs for local businesses as well as City initiatives: Lee Hall, Next Stage, MN (12/15/21), ULI Takeaway (10/12/21 and 9/14/21), Downtown Vision Plan (9/14/21), Downtown Capital Improvements (9/14/21), MetroNet Fiber Optics (2/9/21), CARES Fundings (3/9/21), CDA Update (6/8/21). 2022 WORK PROGRAM The EDC recommended that the work program be divided into two sections: Work Projects and Normal Business Items (Tasks). The work projects will be a reasonable number of larger projects 95 2021 Year in Review & 2022 Recommended Work Plan March 9, 2022 Page 3 that will further economic development opportunities within the community. The work projects will have multiple components and inputs. Tasks will be continuing items that the EDC will undertake on an ad hoc basis. Work Projects 1. Communication: a. Develop communication mechanisms for feedback and surveys for developers, business owners, and residents to understand and improve City interaction with the development and business community. b. Investigate what stakeholders believe are necessary to attract, expand and retain businesses. c. Work with the Economic Development Manager, when hired, to create partnerships and communication avenues. d. Cooperate and coordinate with Buy Chanhassen and the Southwest Area Chamber of Commerce on promoting business retention, expansion and recruitment to Chanhassen. 2. Develop Vision: a. Work with City Council and Planning Commission on a vision for economic development in the community. b. Review role of economic development in the City’s Strategic Plan. c. Promote economic development incentives: financial, zoning, density, etc. d. Work to establish the EDC as a credible and viable commission for the furtherance of economic development in Chanhassen. Tasks a. Work with City staff to review City Code amendments relative to economic development and make recommendations. b. Continue education efforts including housing demand and trends, demographic statistics, mixed use development, sustainable development, development trends, redevelopment issues, transportation projects, senior-friendly cities, etc. c. Participate in joint meetings/discussions with the City Council and other Commissions. d. Review Carver County Community Development Agency (CDA) and other assistance and resources available to Chanhassen businesses. ACTION Staff recommends approval of the annual report and 2022 work program. The EDC may suggest additional items that they may review/research in 2022. Any other suggestions that the Commission would like to see staff address will be added to the list. Subject to Economic Development Commission concurrence, staff will forward this report to the City Council. g:\plan\economic development\edc\2022\memo 2021 year and 2022 work plan.docx 96 Economic Development Commission Item May 10, 2022 Subject Business Subsidy Section DISCUSSION ITEMS Item No: C.3 Prepared By Bob Generous, Senior Planner File No: SUMMARY A Commissioner requested that the Economic Development Commission (EDC) review and discuss business subsidies. BACKGROUND In 2021, the EDC made a recommendation for the awarding of Sewer Availability Charge credits as part of the business subsidy guidelines. DISCUSSION City subsidies for economic development include zoning allowances, tax abatement, tax increment financing, capital programming for infrastructure expansion, Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development (DEED) programs, and Carver County Community Development Agency grants and programs. RECOMMENDATION ATTACHMENTS Business Subsidy Guidelines Memorandum to Laurie Hokkanen 97 City of Chanhassen Business Subsidy Guidelines Approved October 11, 1999 Amended April 28, 2003 Amended September 24, 2018 98 1 CITY OF CHANHASSEN BUSINESS SUBSIDY GUIDELINES GENERAL PURPOSE Economic development incentives are financial tools that enable the City of Chanhassen to provide opportunities and benefits for its businesses and residents. Incentives can take a variety of forms, including, but not limited to: grants, tax increment financing, tax abatement, and sewer access credits. The City of Chanhassen provides economic development incentives in order to achieve its long-range vision of creating a diverse and sustainable economic base. This is achieved in part through the creation and retention of quality, high paying jobs. A diverse and sustainable economy offers opportunity for improved quality of life for the residents of Chanhassen. Economic development projects may also achieve other worthwhile goals. For instance, some projects provide value to the community in the forms of infrastructure improvements, stabilization of business districts or neighborhoods, or concentration of selected industries. The City of Chanhassen reserves the right to approve or reject subsidies for projects on a case-by- case basis, taking into consideration established policies, project criteria, and demand on City services in relation to the potential benefits from the project. Meeting the guidelines in this document does not guarantee the award of business assistance to the project. Approval or denial of one project is not intended to set precedent for approval or denial of another project. The City of Chanhassen can deviate from these guidelines for projects that supersede the objectives identified herein. Any applicant who is not in good standing with the City, in regards to licenses, fees or other specific charges, will not be considered for business subsidies. OBJECTIVES The City of Chanhassen may consider offering a business subsidy or incentive in order for a project to achieve one or more of the following objectives: • To increase the City’s tax base. • To retain local jobs and/or increase the number and diversity of jobs that offer stable employment and/or attractive wages and benefits. Preference will be given to higher paying jobs that also provide benefits such as health care coverage. • To support projects that provide value in the forms of needed transportation and other utility infrastructure improvements that would be completed in conjunction with the project. • To encourage additional unsubsidized private development in the area, either directly or indirectly through “spin off” development. • To facilitate the development process and to achieve development on sites which would not otherwise be developed but for the use of a business subsidy. • To remove blight and/or encourage redevelopment of commercial and industrial areas that will result in high-quality redevelopment and private reinvestment. 99 2 • To offset increased costs of redevelopment (i.e. contaminated site clean-up) over and above the costs normally incurred in development. • To create opportunities for a diversification of housing stock available within the community. • To support a project that will improve the quality of life in the City by providing a desirable good or service and addressing an unmet demand in the community. • To contribute to the implementation of other public policies, as adopted by the City from time to time, such as the promotion of energy conservation, and decreasing capital and/or operating costs of local government. • To support the retention and/or adaptive re-use of buildings of historical or architectural significance. ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT INCENTIVE PROGRAMS The application and subsequent use of these programs is at the discretion of the Chanhassen City Council, and may include additional applications, policies, and procedures. 1) Tax Abatement: The City of Chanhassen is granted the power to utilize tax abatement by the State of Minnesota. The fundamental purpose of tax abatement is to encourage desirable development or redevelopment that would not otherwise occur but for the assistance provided through the tax abatement. The City utilizes “Pay-As-You-Go” Tax Abatement, which relies on the developer to pay for the up-front project costs with reimbursement from tax abatement. 2) Tax Increment Financing: The City of Chanhassen is granted the power to utilize tax increment financing (TIF) by the State of Minnesota. The fundamental purpose of TIF is to encourage desirable development or redevelopment that would not otherwise occur but for the assistance provided through TIF. The City utilizes “Pay-As-You-Go” TIF, which relies on the developer to pay for the up-front project costs with reimbursement from tax increment. 3) MN DEED Programs: There are a variety of programs available through the State of Minnesota DEED division. They include the Job Creation Fund and Minnesota Investment Fund, among others. In order for a business to utilize these programs it is typical for MN DEED to ask for support and cooperation from the city. Chanhassen has worked with MN DEED in the past on projects and would consider the use of these programs in the future on a case-by-case basis. APPLICATION PROCESS 1. The City reserves the right to: a) Request additional information. b) Deny any application. c) Select a third party administrator to assist in the management of the process. 100 3 2. Applicant should retain and be assisted by qualified financial consultants and/or underwriters, and legal counsel. 3. Construction of the project shall not be commenced until the City has given preliminary approval to the application for financing. Any advanced planning or construction completed will be done at the sole risk of the applicant. 4. Applicants should complete the appropriate planning application, and include a plans and/or narratives that outline the following: a) The specific request (program, amount) b) The reasoning and need for assistance c) Description of the company d) A concept plan and description of the project e) The number of jobs created and total compensation (breakdown of wages and benefits) f) Impact to the tax base g) Other impacts to the community h) Traffic demands i) Infrastructure demands and/or needs j) Any additional information that would be helpful to staff and City Council 5. Development must be of the highest quality with high quality building materials and landscaping as agreed between the City and the Developer. 6. If establishing a TIF district, the developer must pay all costs of establishing the district unless the City agrees to allow costs to come out of the district. 7. All projects must be consistent with Chanhassen’s Comprehensive Plan and any other similar plan or guide for development of the community. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION 1. City staff will review the data and make preliminary recommendations to the City Council as to compliance of the application and proposed project with City objectives, and business subsidy criteria, and Comp Plan. 2. After evaluation of the formal recommendation, the City Council will consider approval of the establishment of the Business Subsidy and hold the appropriate hearings. 3. All applications and supporting materials and documents shall become the property of the City. g:\admin\cp\economic development\business subsidy\business subsidy guidelines - 2018 final.docx 101 c:\users\easypd~1\appdata\local\temp\bcl technologies\easypdf 8\@bcl@4c0d5cf3\@bcl@4c0d5cf3.docx MEMORANDUM TO:Laurie Hokkanen, City Manager Kate Aanenson, Community Development Director FROM:Bob Generous, Senior Planner DATE:January 24, 2022 SUBJ:Sewer Availability Charge (SAC) Credit SUMMARY One of the Economic Development Committee’s (EDC) goals and work program is to create a Business Subsidy Program using either a levy, abatement, TIF or other financing mechanism to help offset costs of barrier of entry. The Sewer Availability Charge credits provide a financing mechanism that may assist in this endeavor. BACKGROUND The EDC discussed criteria for the use of Sewer Availability Charge credits at both the December 15, 2021 and January 11, 2022 Commission meetings. A SAC credit policy is not contained in the City’s Business Subsidy Guidelines. The EDC discussed the creation of a SAC credit policy to recommend to City Council. The EDC policy did not intend to rank any one priority above the others. RECOMMENDATION The EDC recommends that the City incorporate the following in the City’s Business Subsidy Guidelines as an Economic Development Incentive Program: 4. Sewer Availability Charge (SAC) Credit. The Metropolitan Council Environmental Services (MCES) charges the SAC directly to local governments, pursuant to Minnesota Statutes section 473.517 subd. (3). SAC credits are created when the MCES determines that a change in use or elimination of a use permanently frees up sewer capacity (in SAC units) within a local jurisdiction. The SAC credit allocation policy shall prioritize the following: Expanding existing businesses Bringing new or unique businesses to the community Providing additional employment opportunities (quality or quantity) Targeting small businesses ATTACHMENT Business Subsidy Guidelines 102