It's a cruel joke! NYC food delivery drivers slam customers for being stingy after wading low-wage workers waded through record floods - including one who got a $5 tip for an HOUR-LONG journey Food delivery workers rode their e-bikes all over the city in record flood - some up to 14 hours - and made minimum wage or less including tips One delivery food worker said he made $5, including the tip, for an hour-long journey from Brooklyn to Astoria and $115 - including tips - for 9.5 hours of work Another worker had a 14-hour day and made $277, including tips Johnny Miller, a freelance photographer, captured a video of a delivery food worker slogging through waist-high flood waters Brooklyn Miller posted the video on his 'Unequal Scenes' Twitter account, which was seen more 10.5 million times He's on a mission to find the worker and donate money he made from media proceeds to him By Christopher Eberhart For Dailymail.Com Published: 15:35 BST, 3 September 2021 | Updated: 16:05 BST, 3 September 2021 1 Viewcomments A food delivery worker who braved the fatal record floods that swamped New York City roads got a measly $5 tip after making the hour-long trip from Brooklyn to Astoria. 'It’s a cruel joke. This is exactly why we protest and we organize — we need fair wages. These companies are getting richer and richer and we’re only earning $5 in these conditions,' Toño Solís, a member of the delivery worker labor collective Los Deliveristas Unidos, told The City. In typical conditions, Grubhub delivery workers make a minimum wage of $2 per delivery - regardless of how much food is ordered - and it goes up depending on demand, The City reported. On Wednesday, Solís said he made $115, including tips, for 9.5 hours of work. Lázaro Morales, a Grubhub delivery worker, told The City he made $277, including tips, for 14 hours of work. Morales called it 'the most horrible day ever on the job.' 'The clients are very inconsiderate: As long as they get their meal, they don’t care about us,' he told The City. Scroll down for video. A delivery food worker fights through waist-high flood waters to bring food to someone in Brooklyn The photographer - Twitter user 'Unequal Scenes' - is looking for this worker to donate money from media proceeds for his video Throughout Wednesday night's historic storm, NYC food delivery workers slogged through flood waters to bring food to people On top of customers' pathetic tips and companies' low wages, the storm damaged many workers' e-bikes, which is their only way to get around, and they have to use their own money to get them fixed. Johnny Miller, a freelance photographer, captured a video of a delivery food worker slogging through waist-high flood waters to bring food to someone in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, that was seen 10.5 million times. Miller is on a mission to find the identity of the worker and donate money to him from media proceeds from the video, which was posted on Miller's 'Unequal Scenes' Twitter account. He tweeted the video at all the major food delivery apps to find the worker. 'Seeing this guy push his bicycle past these people in Mercedes to deliver Chinese food just turned my stomach,' Miller told The New York Times. 'Some of us have the privilege to not work during a disaster and some of us don’t.' A food delivery work on an e-bike fights through the same flood waters that is impacting a car Food delivery workers battled these conditions for shifts that lasted up to 14 hours and made less than $300 Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez shared the video on her Twitter account and said, 'Please do not be the person who orders delivery during a flash flood that the NWS (National Weather Service) has deemed a dangerous and life-threatening situation. 'It puts vulnerable people at risk. If it’s too dangerous for you, it’s too dangerous for them. Raid your cabinets or ask a neighbor for help.' Share or comment on this article: All rights reserved for this news site (dailymail) and under his responsibility