Ottawa Citizen

Food franchisee­s wooed in labour fight

- CANDICE CHOI

Labour organizers are opening a new front in their campaign for a US$15-an-hour wage for fast-food workers with a push to mobilize an unusual ally: franchisee­s.

The Service Employees Internatio­nal Union on Thursday launched a website in hopes of building a national network of fast-food franchisee­s who want stronger protection­s for their businesses. The push has the potential to create more unrest within the ranks for companies like McDonald’s, which are already dealing with ongoing demonstrat­ions calling for higher pay and a union for workers.

The Internatio­nal Franchise Associatio­n, which represents franchisor­s like McDonald’s, Subway and Wendy’s, said in a statement that franchisee­s indicate “incredibly high satisfacti­on rates.” It noted that data from the Federal Trade Commission shows franchisee­s renew their contracts at “an extremely high rate.”

Support from the SEIU, the nation’s second-largest union, could neverthele­ss give franchisee advocates more clout in changing what they say is an imbalance of power. Franchisee advocates say they’re at the mercy of companies that can strip them of their livelihood­s if they step out of line or speak out against corporate decisions.

Still, the push by the SEIU marks an uneasy alliance, since franchisee­s are often small-business owners who oppose unions.

“It’s an odd relationsh­ip, let’s face it,” said Keith Miller, a Subway franchisee in Sacramento, Calif., and head of the Coalition of Franchisee Associatio­ns, which is working with the SEIU on the effort.

Miller added franchisee­s may not be able to raise pay for workers even if they wanted to, given the cost pressures they’re put under from companies on matters like value menus.

The SEIU’s outreach to franchisee­s is just the latest move in a campaign to win pay of US$15 an hour and a union for fast-food workers. The effort began in late 2012 and involves a range of tactics intended to build pressure on McDonald’s, including demonstrat­ions in a growing number of cities and multiple lawsuits on behalf of workers in the U.S. and abroad.

The efforts have been complicate­d by the franchisin­g model that dominates the fast-food industry, however. McDonald’s Corp., for instance, has more than 3,000 franchisee­s in the U.S. who run about 90 per cent of its more than 14,300 locations. A representa­tive for McDonald’s did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

In exchange for paying a variety of fees and following certain operationa­l guidelines, franchisee­s get to become business owners with proven brands. But the arrangemen­t can lead to natural tensions; franchisee­s may not agree with decisions by the company on matters like new menu prices or remodellin­g investment­s.

 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Across the U.S., fast-food and other low-wage workers have been protesting for a US$15-an-hour wage.
ELAINE THOMPSON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Across the U.S., fast-food and other low-wage workers have been protesting for a US$15-an-hour wage.

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