The Prince George Citizen

Fast food workers demand higher wages

- Danielle PAQUETTE Citizen news service

CHICAGO — About 150 cooks and cashiers blocked the entrance Monday to McDonald’s headquarte­rs in Chicago, protesting what they call unfairly low pay at one of the world’s largest fast-food chains.

“McDonald’s, McDonald’s – you can’t hide,” they chanted. “We can see your greedy side.”

The protest was organized by “Fight for $15,” a campaign funded by the Service Employees Internatio­nal Union that has been pushing to lift wages, and has been pressuring McDonald’s since 2012,

The protesters delivered a letter urging the company ahead of its annual shareholde­r meeting Thursday.

“We are cooks and cashiers who work behind the company’s counters, grills and fryers across the country,” the letter said. “And we are calling on McDonald’s to use its massive power and wealth to lift up people of color and our communitie­s rather than keep us locked in poverty.”

The letter said that low pay disproport­ionately hurt visible minorities, citing the National Employment Law Project, an advocacy group, which says that 54 per cent of black workers and 60 per cent of Hispanic workers nationwide earn less than $15 hourly, compared to 36 per cent of white workers.

McDonald’s said in a statement that the chain will invest $150 million over the next five years into helping employees play for college tuition.

“We also lowered eligibilit­y requiremen­ts, making the program more accessible,” spokespers­on Terri Hickey said in an email.

“These enhancemen­ts underscore McDonald’s and its independen­t franchisee­s’ commitment to providing jobs that fit around the lives of restaurant employees so they may pursue their education and career ambitions.”

In 2015, McDonald’s pledged to pay all employees at the roughly 1,500 stores it directly controls in the United States at least $1 an hour above the local minimum wage. (The raises were a one-time deal.) But most of the approximat­ely 14,000 stores in the country are run by franchisee­s who were not bound by that decision.

Matt Haller, senior vice president of government relations and public affairs at the Internatio­nal Franchise Associatio­n, a trade group, said it was impractica­l for McDonald’s to demand franchisee­s meet a minimum pay standard because they operate like small business owners.

Such a move would elevate the cost of opening the stores, he said, and “take away opportunit­ies for people who have decided to run them.”

Unhappy employees, he added, can leave for higher pay in this increasing­ly tight labour market.

“If you are a franchisee and you’re not paying a competitiv­e wage,” he said, “those employees are free to move and find a better opportunit­y for themselves.”

So, the workers say they’re taking the matter into the streets, marching through downtown Chicago on Monday and then caravaning to the Illinois statehouse in Springfiel­d.

Terrence Wise, a 38-year-old McDonald’s employee at an individual­ly owned store in Kansas City, Missouri, said he works 40hour weeks for the chain and still must rely on food stamps to feed his three teenage daughters. Over the last four years, his pay has crept up from $7.50 an hour as a cook to $9.40 as a manager.

A $15 hourly wage, Wise said, would transform his life.

“I would not all of a sudden have a beachfront home in Florida,” he said, speaking on the phone from Chicago.

“Let’s be real. I could pay my bills. I wouldn’t have to skip meals. I could buy my kids new shoes more than once every two years.”

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? McDonald’s workers and supporters rally outside a McDonald’s in Chicago on April 15, 2015. A similar protest was held outside McDonald’s headquarte­rs in Chicago on Monday.
AP FILE PHOTO McDonald’s workers and supporters rally outside a McDonald’s in Chicago on April 15, 2015. A similar protest was held outside McDonald’s headquarte­rs in Chicago on Monday.

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