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Spandex, Spokes, and a Lotta Nerve
(Story)
U.S. News & World Report, 09/18/2000
Highlight: The strange and wondrous life of couriers
Section: Science & Ideas
Full Text: (Philadelphia) PHILADELPHIA--There were sleek
titanium road bikes with razor-thin tires, fixed-gear track bikes
with no brakes, battered mountain bikes, and cargo bikes capable
of hauling 200 pounds. On a grassy wedge of the city's sprawling
Fairmount Park, a cold can of beer in hand, Matt Rowley surveyed
their owners: bike messengers from across North America and from
as far away as Zurich, Tokyo, and Budapest clad in bike cleats and
ragged shorts, sporting mint-green hair and dreadlocks, lip rings
and elaborate tattoos, and all gathered for a single purpose. This
is why Rowley became a bike courier. "How many jobs actually
have a community?" he asks. "Go to a dentists' convention
and I guarantee you it won't look like this."
Rowley and about 500 other couriers spent Labor Day weekend in
Philadelphia competing in the eighth annual Cycle Messenger World
Championships, which bring couriers from around the globe to vie
for the title of "Fastest Messenger in the World." The
race course includes mock offices, making the contest one of organization
as well as speed as couriers try to pick up and drop off the most
packages. But the meeting is also a chance to trade stories (about
strange deliveries, like human organs and multimillion-dollar checks,
for instance) and complaints, such as the need for better pay and
basic benefits for a job that is one of the riskiest out there.
"One out of 20 people I train will last more than a month.
Either the riding's too much, the pay's too little, or they just
get scared," says San Francisco messenger John Thompson, who
has been "messing" for six years. Couriers in the United
States make an average of $21,600, by one estimate. Meanwhile, oblivious
or angry drivers are a constant threat, as is the risk of getting
"doored": being brought to a violent halt by a car door
opening unexpectedly. Most rookies wash out in the winter, when
rain, snow, and ice turn each day into an endurance contest and
each delivery into a potential disaster.
Bike couriers have been around for at least a century, with messengers
in California riding a Pony Express-like relay route as early as
1894. Telegrams and packages were delivered by bicycle at the end
of the 19th century, though delivery vans and motorcycles supplanted
bikes by the 1930s. Not until the urban traffic and tight deadlines
of the 1970s did the bike messenger return. By the 1980s, they were
a fixture of urban life. A hardworking New York courier could make
$40,000 a year, and the industry spread to other cities--despite
such threats as the fax machine, overnight mail, and E-mail. Today,
couriers are crucial to Internet Web sites looking to satisfy customers
with one-hour delivery of videos and groceries. "When I started
I had old-fogy guys telling me this business was going to be gone
in five years," says Rebecca "Lambchop" Reilly, author
of Nerves of Steel: Bike Messengers in the United States
and an eight-year courier veteran. "Bike messengers are still
really needed. The bike messenger is paid to be in your face. A
fax . . . doesn't stand up and say, `Hello, I need a signature.'
"
High times. While couriers are on the rise (Reilly estimates
that there are about 6,000 couriers in the United States and 12,000
worldwide), their image and calculated disregard for traffic laws
have caused a backlash in some cities. When a courier collided with
a prominent Bostonian in 1997, putting him in a coma--couriers say
he was jaywalking--the city cracked down, requiring messengers to
buy licenses and insurance and making them liable for fines up to
$300.
A greater collision may be the culture clash between couriers and
the offices they serve. "We're definitely viewed as second-class
citizens" by white-collar workers, Rowley says. But he thinks
their derision only masks something else: "They're jealous."
So much so that dressing like couriers has become accepted fashion
over the past decade: The courier's characteristic shoulder bag
is a must-have for dot-com and traditional execs alike.
And when money is on the line, messengers say the usual snubs are
quickly laid aside. Says Dylan Canfield, a soft-spoken Seattle messenger:
"You're definitely everybody's best friend when you deliver
a package in 15 minutes that nobody thought could be done."
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