Here we go again with a special interest gaming
the system to the hilt in ways that are contrary to the public interest. Recall that artificially low wages forces the
government to subsidize the worker’s medical costs as an example. Getting angry yet?
The minimum wage is a public policy issue first
and foremost. We the people want every
live body to show up healthy for a day’s work.
Thus minimum wage needs to cover the following:
1
Sufficient high quality
calories delivered as vegetarian. This
is not only much cheaper but also much healthier. The individual can option for meats with
family support or shifting calories around, but we provide a deliverable
benchmark.
2
Minimum medical
insurance. If that is still ridiculous,
so be it. We will get the industry some
other way.
3
Minimum communication
budget and a miscellany provision to be determined.
4
A housing allowance
determined by the average rental availability within a one hour transit
trip. This is meant to become expensive
in downtown Manhattan although that will likely not happen actually. It will certainly be less in small town South
Dakota.
5
A ten percent tax budget
as well.
This becomes public policy rather than a drive
to shift serious costs onto the backs of the rest of us because the fast food
industry knows how to tell a good story.
Once a new regime is in place, all industry will adjust.
I would also automatically cancel collective
bargaining at around four times the minimum wage. At that point you should be on your own and
the market needs to be opened up and made highly competitive. It will actually be happening anyway because
it is in everyone’s interest at that point.
To actually implement such a regime, I would put
the laws in place and allow the actual cost transition to be at one tenth per
year for ten years. That allows patches
to be put in place as they come up and are discovered necessary. It could well be the union of leather workers
will be quite happy to accept lower wages to keep their industry
competitive. This way losses can be
managed and minimized.
How the Restaurant Lobby Makes Sure Fast-Food
Workers Get Poverty Wages
Sunday, 08 September 2013 10:35
While thousands of fast-food
workers were preparing to walk off their jobs earlier this summer to seek
raises to $15 an hour, the industry’s corporate lobbyist, the National
Restaurant Association, was celebrating a string of political victories
blocking state minimum wage increases and preempting local sick day laws.
In June, the NRA boasted that
its lobbyists had stopped minimum wage increases in 27 out of 29 states in
2013. In Connecticut, which increased its state minimum wage, a raise in the
base pay for tipped workers such as waitresses and bartenders vanished in the
final bill. A similar scenario unfolded in New York State: It increased its
minimum wage, but the NRA’s last-minute lobbying derailed raising the pre-tip
wage at restaurants and bars. The deals came despite polls showing 80
percent support for raising the minimum wage.
The NRA’s lobbying
didn’t stop there. It also told members that it blocked a
dozen states this year from passing laws that would require earned paid sick
leave, which is what New York City and Portland, Oregon adopted.
Meanwhile, it boasted that six states, including Florida, passed NRA-backed
laws that preemptively ban localities from granting earned and paid employee
sick time.
“These are horrible
things, but there are amazing things that are happening to change it,” said
Saru Jayaraman, co-director and co-founder of the Restaurant
Opportunities Centers United (ROC), which has been working a dozen
years to slowly change the industry’s exploitive business model and labor practices.
“And there will be increasingly important stuff coming up.”
As fast-food workers
across the country prepare for a second nationwide walkoutover wages on Thursday, most Americans have
little idea how profitable and
politically aggressive the corporate mainstays of
America’s second biggest employer have become. While labor activists have had
victories in 2013, such as New York and Portland passing sick leave laws,
and New Jersey poised
to raise its minimum wage via a ballot measure this fall, the restaurant
industry’s lobbying powerhouse is at war with the industry’s workers.
“It’s an old-boy
network. It’s very old-school thinking. It’s very, very conservative,” said
Paul Saginaw, founder of Zingerman’s food companies in Michigan, which employes 600 people
and unlike the
NRA, supports better benefits for employees like healthcare. “There has to be
some pressure put out to provide better lives for people.”
Most Americans are
unaware that millions of people who work in the industry—especially the 2.5
million fast-food preparers and servers who earn an average of $8.74 an hour,
according to federal labor statistics—are not just teens in
their first job, but adults with families to support. They may not know there’s
a separate minimum wage for tipped workers, $2.13 an hour, that hasn’t changed
in 22 years—although 32 states have raised it slightly. They may not realize
that they, as the restaurant-going public, subsidize owners via cash tips, even
as the NRA routinely tells legislators its industry cannot afford to pay better
wages or basic benefits.
Most Americans don’t
know that restaurant salaries are so low that the industry’s 12.2 million workers
use food stamps at twice the
rate of the U.S. workforce, and are three times as likely to be below the
poverty line. Or that women earn
less than men in similar jobs. Or that restaurants are among the biggest low-wage employers of people of color. Or
that virtually every chain—except for In
and Out, according to ROC—don’t want to pay living
wages and benefits or offer real opportunities for
advancement.
Most tellingly, almost
every national chain—from fast-food outfits such as Yum! Brands Inc. (Taco
Bell, Pizza Hut, KFC) and McDonald’s to full-service dining such as Darden
Restaurants Inc. (Olive Garden, Red Lobster, Capital Grille)—have reported higher
revenues, profits, margins and cash holdings to Wall Street analysts despite
the recession, according to the National Employment Law Project. Giants like
McDonalds had 7.8 percent revenue growth over the past decade, according to
Gurufocus.com, a financial reporting site. Yum had 10-year revenues of 8.7
percent, and Darden’s 10-year revenues grew 9.1 percent.
But last winter, as the
NRA was fighting minimum wage increases and paid sick leave, it was telling
lawmakers that the industry could not afford to pay employees more. Yet this
August, the NRA’s newsletter was predicting another
profitable year, where revenues would be up 4 percent compared to 2012.
"Restaurant and foodservice sales are expected to reach a record high of
$660.5 billion this year," another 2013 revenue forecast on
its website said.
“The NRA is the worst
employer lobby in the U.S.,” Jayaraman said, speaking about its lobbying and PR
operation that pretends it is not an industry dominated by Fortune 500
companies, but instead a rickety mom-and-pop operation teetering on the brink
of ruin. “The [earnings] data does not bear any resemblance to what they say is
true.”
There are many reasons
why America’s restaurant industry, which employs nearly one
in 10 Americans, gets away with underpaying its
workers and blocking laws that would benefit employees. These reasons include
the industry’s longtime low-wage business mode; its longstanding fear-based
lobbying that any wage or benefit increase would kill jobs; and a sophisticated
political operation that nurtures ties to both parties, encouraging lawmakers
to adopt anti-worker laws.
“The question is where
is it coming from and who benefits,” said Ben Goldfarb, executive director of
Wellstone Action, a group that trains progressive activists. “We know who
benefits. It’s the Restaurant Association members and the electeds
[legislators] who do their bidding… It’s not about what’s good or bad for the
economy.”
Exploitive Roots, Exploitive
Lobbying
The business model—where
almost everyone except for top management earns an average of slightly more than $11 per hour—is premised on paying
workers the lowest legal salary and has not changed in decades. As The New Yorker’s James
Surowiecki recently explained,
many of today’s largest service-sector companies, particularly restaurants and
big-box retailers, were founded decades ago and sought to hire young people and
housewives as low-wage, part-time employees, to give them work experience and
spending money. “The reason this has become a big political issue is not that
the jobs have changed; it’s that the people doing the jobs have.”
This summer’s fast food
walk-outs—which will continue this fall—are part of a campaign to challenge and change that status quo,
particularly as the media is discovering that the largely non-unionized
restaurant workforce is filled with people with families. One consequence of
the Great Recession is that millions of middle-class jobs have been replaced by
lower-paying service jobs—food sector jobs that are now filled by adults with
children, and jobs that offer little opportunity
for advancement.
“On what I’m earning right
now you have to choose between paying your rent and eating the next day,”
Christopher Drumgold, a 32-year-old father of two from Detroit who earns $7.40
an hour after a year at McDonald’s, told reporters
during July’s fast-food worker walk-out. “Fifteen dollars an hour would be
great. We’d be able to pay our living costs.”
This kind of
working-class struggle prompted President Obama to call for
raising the federal minimum wage from $7.25 an hour to $9 in his 2013 State of
the Union speech. Some Democrats in Congress quickly responded by going higher,
proposing it be raised to $10.10, and that the minimum cash wage for tipped
workers be 70 percent of the federal (or higher state) minimum wage.
While polls
consistently find that
80 percent of Americans, including majorities of Republicans and people earning
more than $100,000 a year, support a $10.10 wage, the industry’s national and
state-level lobbyists went to work to kill any increase at the state or federal
levels. And if that didn’t work, they sought exemptions for tipped workers in
states where the increase was seen as passing.
What unfolded in New
York, which raised its minimum wage but not for tipped restaurant workers, and
in Maryland, where the NRA stopped a minimum wage increase in a legislative
committee, shows just how the NRA wields its power and influence.
“The NRA is a very
conservative organization… my values are so different,” said Saginaw, who has
been in the restaurant business for 31 years and was a former member. “They
certainly weren’t representing my interests. They talk the small business owner
game a lot but their lobbying efforts are dictated by the large corporate
chains. I’m a small businessman.”
New York State: A Cautionary
Tale
Many Americans are not
aware that there is more than one minimum wage. There’s the federal wage for non-tipped workers, which is $7.25 an
hour or $15,080 a year and took effect in July 2009. Nineteen states and the
District of Columbia haveraised that rate. A few states, such as New
Mexico and California, allow jurisdictions to set locally higher minimums.
Then there’s the tipped wage, for jobs where the public tips workers. The
federal tip wage, which is $2.13 an hour, was last raised in 1991. Thirty-two
states have raised it slightly. Employers are supposed to pay the difference
between that base and other state or federal minimum. But, as ROC United said, that doesn’t always happen. And then
there are other minimum wages for immigrants, minors and people with
disabilities.
In New York, the minimum
wage increase in 2013 fell prey to partisan games. “It could be seen as good
intentions gone awry,” said Frank Sobrino, press secretary for New York State
Democratic Sen. Jose Peralta, explaining what happened as his state
legislature raised the state’s minimum wage this year from $7.25 an hour to $9
an hour by 2016.
New York’s Senate is
controlled by an odd majority of Republicans and so-called independent
Democrats—not his boss, Sobrino said. When the GOP agreed to raise the wage in
secret last-minute negotiations—after blocking it for years — the final bill
did not include a tip wage increase for waiters and bartenders, which is what
the industry wanted. Tipped workers at car washes and airports will get a
raise, said Working Families spokesman Joe Dinkin. “But hotel and restaurant
waiters and bartenders, which are the largest group of tipped workers, do not
get an automatic increase. Rather, the tipped minimum wage will go to the Wage
Board, which is controlled by Gov. [Andrew] Cuomo, to do what he wants with it.
And yes, this is because of the National Restaurant Association.”
The bill also contained
an unprecedented and alarming payoff to fast-food chains and big retailers: a
tax credit offsetting the cost of hiring teenagers, but only for minimum wage.
That subsidy drew the media’s attention. A Wall
Street Journal editorial,
“Minimum Intelligence,” said it provided an incentive to fire workers 20 years
and older and replace them with teens. “For a teen working full time, the
annual subsidy could be worth as much as $2,800 per worker by 2016,” the Buffalo News editorial said.
Sen. Peralta, the Queens
Democrat, has since proposed a bill to nullify the tax break that analysts say
will be worth millions to
big employers.
There were two features
of this deal that exempifly how the NRA operates, ROC’s Jayaraman said. First,
NRA lobbyists keep telling lawmakers that their industry primarily employs
teenagers and young people who don’t need higher wages and benefits. Their PR
shop has even absurdly claimed that
raising minimum wages would kill entry-level jobs. That line apparently was
bought by the New York State Republican senator who inserted the tax subsidy at
the last minute.
But the brouhaha over
the tax subsidy also helped the NRA keep its last-minute deal on excluding the
minimum wage for food servers somewhat hidden. “They are worried about public
outrage,” Jayaraman said, noting that the same kind of secret last-minute deal
excluding tip wages emerged in Connecticut when it raised its minimum wage.
“That happened at the last minute with legislators and lobbyists for the NRA,”
she said. “Everyone who had been working on this was blindsided. Typically,
they don’t bring it [excluding tip wages] up at hearings.”
Maryland: Sowing Fear Not Hope
But in Maryland, the
NRA’s lobbyists were more brazen. They did bring up excluding tipped workers
and they trashed them—but only after waiting six hours to testify, long after
most labor activists had testified and the hearing room was almost empty.
First came Carville
Collins, representing a regional Wendy’s chain with 108 stores and 3,100
employees. He rolled out the NRA’s standard “job killer” speech, which was
also presented by
NRA lobbyists in Congress this spring. Carville said that
raising wages “imposes costs we cannot pass onto consumers.” He said a proposed
three-step increase to $10 an hour would cause “five to eight” stores to close,
putting as many as 300 people out of work. Moreover, if Maryland’s minimum wage
was higher than nearby states, it would attract out-of-staters who would “come
and displace Maryland workers.” Carville then cited research from
the NRA-fundedEmployment Policy Institute,
projecting that a national $9.80 minimum wage would kill “256,000 to 768,000
jobs,” including thousands of jobs in Maryland.
Melvin Thompson, senior
vice president of the NRA’s state affiliate, the Restaurant Association of
Maryland, immediately followed, and opposed raising minimum wages “for all the
reasons you have heard already.” But then he attacked, claiming that servers
often stole tips—saying they didn’t need an increase. He said restaurant
workers made two to three times the minimum wage and some waiters earned more
money than owners. He concluded, “the tip portion doesn’t need to be included
in this bill.”
Needless to say,
progressive restaurant owners, activists and economists have
thoroughly debunked each of these claims. As Zingerman’s Saginaw said, “The
workforce has changed. It’s not just students and people out of college. It’s
much more diverse than that.” Economists have pointed out that
at McDonald’s, for example, half of the cost of raising its minimum hourly pay
to $10.50 could come by adding a nickel to the price of a $4 Big Mac. Other
studies by ROC have found that
a dime increase in daily food prices could support a 33 percent raise for
minimum wage workers and a doubling of the base tip wage.
But, as the Wellstone
Institute’s Ben Goldfarb explained, NRA lobbyists seek to sow just enough doubt
and gray areas that it becomes easy for legislators to vote against proposed
wage-increase bills, or just exempt their industry entirely.
These fear-based
scripts—which have been studied and
rebutted by the National Employment Law Project (NELP)—prompted
legislators, including a handful of Democrats, to vote against the Maryland
bill in committee. The local advocates,Raise Maryland,
are not giving up. They have analyzed how much Maryland gave away in business
subsidies this year and written memos rebutting the NRA’s testimony. Raise
Maryland volunteers have been knocking on thousands of doors this summer to
generate support and get people to write to lawmakers to change their minds and
reconsider the issue, campaign coordinator Matt Hanson said.
Suppressing Wages Isn’t Enough
The NRA did not respond
to a list of questions from AlterNet beyond an initial phone call where a
spokeswoman emphasized that the industry’s profit margins are so slim—3 or 4
percent—it can’t afford to do more. Yet the industry is America’s largest low-wage sector and
is filled with corporations that have been consistently profitable despite the
sluggish economy, according to NELP’s analyses of
Wall Street earnings reports. Yet the NRA not only opposes raising wages and
linking wages to inflation, it has another draconian priority: opposing local
laws granting earned sick leave.
Despite protests by workers who have publicly explained
what it’s like to have to go to work sick, the NRA has been lobbying in
statehouses to preempt cities and counties from passing local laws that would
require employers to grant earned paid sick leave. ROC notes that 90 percent of restaurant workers
don’t have paid sick days, and “two-thirds report cooking, preparing and
serving food while sick.” That reality, captured in videos by sick workers, helped a coalition led
by Working Families in
New York City and Connecticut to adopt local sick leave laws. These were
significant victories. The New York City law will affect a
million workers. (San Francisco, Seattle, Portland, Oregon, and the District of
Columbia also require earned sick time.)
New York’s passage of
sick leave legislation grabbed headlines, especially as it became law when the
city council overrode Mayor
Michael Bloomberg’s veto. But in the past two years, NRA lobbyists have pushed eight
states to preempt or repeal local labor laws that include requiring paid sick
leave. The industry—helped by prominent Democrats such as Colorado Gov. John
Hickenlooper and Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter—also beat proposed sick
leave laws in Denver and Philadelphia.
This trend started in
Wisconsin and shows how right-wing alliances spread anti-labor legislation. In
2011, Wisconsin’s Republican Gov. Scott Walker backed anindustry-led effort
to ban paid sick leave laws, like the one Milwaukee’s votersadopted as
a ballot measure in 2008 while Walker was county
executive — its top elected official. Seventy percent of voters had backed paid
sick leave. That spring, the passage of Wisconsin’s bill preempting local laws
was touted as
a model by the NRA at meetings of the American Legislative Exchange Council,
the pro-corporate lobbying mill. ALEC members, almost all Republicans,
introduced copycat bills in their states, Wellstone Action’s Goldfarb said,
saying this was how the NRA’s priority spread and “scaled.” These were passed
by GOP-majority statehouses, sometimes using strongarm tactics that dismayed
labor organizers.
This summer, for
example, Republicans in Florida’s Orange County—near Walt Disney
World—were lobbied by
fast-food giants, including Darden,
which owns Red Lobster, Olive Garden and Capital Grille, and Disney, and
intentionally delayedacting on another sick leave ballot measure that
had 80 percent support
in polls. That tactic gave the restaurant lobby time to push its preemption
bill through its legislature, which GOP Gov. Rick Scott signed into
law in July. Arizona, Mississippi, Louisiana, Kansas, Indiana and Tennessee
have all passed bans on local sick leave laws. Michigan, Alabama, Oklahoma and
South Carolina are considering it.
The Arizona Restaurant
Association lobbyist said last
March that no one was proposing a sick leave law in her state, but “we’re
fortunate to get out in front of it.” In Memphis, Tennessee, the prospect that
Shelby County was considering a
wage theft ordinance—because restaurants there hadn’t paid $270,000 in back
wages to workers that a coalition of lawyers and churches recovered in
court—prompted its GOP-majority state legislature to act and preempt local
labor laws. “That [wage-theft law]… would have been very harmful to local
businesses,” the Tennessee Hospitality Association told its
members.
Public Health vs. Private
Profits
In all these political
fights, the question of who is being harmed is the critical question. The NRA
is touting an
old anti-regulatory script—trotted out by state chambers of commerce for
years—that any cost that cuts into profits is a job killer and must be stopped.
But advocates like ROC and Working Families say that argument is upside down.
Low pay and no benefits not only hurts worker productivity, it also hurts
families and undercuts local consumer spending.
“It’s an old-school
chamber of commerce attitude—it’s anti regulation,” Zingerman’s Saginaw said.
“We believe that by paying higher wages and benefits we will get better
productivity from our staff and have more satisfied customers.”
And when it comes to
sick leave, there is another dimension: the public is at risk when food
is prepared by
workers who can’t afford to take a day or a few hours off to visit a doctor.
ROC’s 2012 report on Darden described a
North Carolina Olive Garden worker who came to work in 2011 with Hepatitis A,
prompting the county to vaccinate thousands of people and a class-action
lawsuit.
“Almost no laws anywhere
in the country require restaurants to provide paid sick leave for employees who
come down with anything from the sniffles to a norovirus,”noted Grubstreet.com.
“On the other hand, pretty much every single municipal health department in the
country has a rule or law requiring employers to keep sick employees away from
food and out of the restaurants, and that’s where things get problematic.”
Problematic is not
exactly the correct word. When it comes to the NRA and its state affiliates,
greedy and shamelessly political are more accurate. And that is why thousands
of fast-food workers across the country plan to walk out of their jobs on
Thursday, in what organizers says will be months of continuing labor
actions—including a focus in September on raising tip wages.
“The NRA is a lobbying
machine—it is for the owners of restaurants and restaurant chains that are
turning a profit off the backs of workers,” said Shannon Liss-Riordan, a labor
lawyer and owner of Just Crust,
a pizza restaurant in Harvard Square in Cambridge, Massachusetts. “It doesn’t
have to be that way.”
High Road Employers
Meanwhile, advocates
like ROC have formed a progressive restaurant trade association, RAISE,
and are encouraging people to sign petitions to raise minimum wages and
benefits, as well as use its new National
Diners’ Guide identifying which restaurants treat
employees fairly. They’re also encouraging people dining out to ask owners
about paying fair wages, just as the public asked about organic and local
foodstuffs and gradually changed menu offerings.
“We try to encourage
that kind of economic inquiry,” said Liss-Riordan, a RAISE member. “A few years
ago, it was pretty revolutionary to ask, ‘How fresh is your arugula?’ Now we
want people to ask, ‘Are you paying fair wages?’ It’s just getting started. We
are hoping that it’s a powerful idea that will take off.”
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