Metro

It’s hard being a NYC pedicab driver during the COVID-19 pandemic

Tourists are hard to come by in Manhattan these days, but a handꩲful of pedi🏅cab drivers are still out there looking for customers.

“It’s dead. Nothing,” Solo Sawajao, 33, told ൲The🌼 Post while looking for customers at Sixth Avenue and Central Park South.

Yet despite giving “zero” tours many days amid the COVID-19 pandemic, Sawajao and a few dozen others 𒊎🌱continue to seek out the scarce New Yorkers and tourists interested in a pedal-powered carriage ride.

“There are no jobs anyway𒅌,” Sawajao added. “If there were jobs, I would take [them]. But there’s no jobs.”

For the most part, Sawajao and his fellow power pedalers — once notorious for overcharging out-of-towners for short jaun🦩ts around𓄧 town — are sitting around with empty carriages.

“I try to work every day, but there is no jobs right now,” agreed pedicab owner Sal, 30, of Brooklyn, whose 10-vehicle fleet — once rent𒅌ed out to fellow drivers — is otherwise collecting dust.

“Before the pandemic, there used to be 250 p𒈔edicabs out in C𓄧entral Park. Right now it’s 10 to 15,” he said.

“In the streets💙, there were more than 300. Right now it’s maybe 50 total.”

Sal said he goes out five days a week, six to eight hours each time. Yet while he made $1,000 a week before the coronavirus crisis and ensuing sh🦂utdown, today he’s lucky to come home with $30.

Some days he comes home empty.

Cameron, 29, another pedicabbie, said he’s cut his prices down by two-thirds. There simply aren’t that many people visiting New York City these days, and the locals aren’t interested.

“New Yorkers, they never take pedicabs,” he said. Instead, customers come from close staꩵtes like Pennsylvania, Connecticut and New Jersey.

Still, the men persist — and not just because they don’t have better options. Business has perked up slightly as the city has slowly begun to open in recent weeks, offering a glimmer of hope.

“We want 🍃to save this business. It’s a very good business in the future,” Sal said.

“Before, we were all mak𒈔ing good money. I think by the end of♎ this year, maybe next year, it’s going to be better.”