Chattanooga Times Free Press

McDonald’s will hike wages at some locations

- BY JULIE CRESWELL

Competing with fastfood chains, restaurant­s and other businesses for workers, McDonald’s said Thursday that it, too, will raise wages at some restaurant­s in an effort to attract employees.

The company said that it would increase hourly wages for current employees by an average of 10% and that the entry-level wage for new employees would rise to between $11 to $17 an hour, based on the location of the restaurant.

The pay increases do not affect the 95% of the nearly 14,000 U.S. restaurant­s that are independen­tly owned, only the 650 company-owned restaurant­s.

Responding to a tight job market and echoing a move earlier this week by the burrito chain Chipotle, McDonald’s said it hoped the higher pay would attract as many as 10,000 new employees in the next three months, as the busy summer season approaches and dine-in restrictio­ns are removed at many of its restaurant­s.

At its company-owned restaurant­s, McDonald’s said the average employee wage would increase to $13 an hour, with some restaurant­s achieving an average wage of $15 an hour later this year. All company-owned restaurant­s expected to be at an average salary of $15 by 2024, the company noted.

Still, that falls short of the minimum wage of $15 an hour being demanded by the Fight for $15 organizati­on, which is backed by the Service Employees Internatio­nal Union. The Fight for $15 organizati­on is spearheadi­ng a strike by McDonald’s employees in several cities Wednesday ahead of the company’s annual shareholde­r meeting.

A leader for Fight for $15 dismissed McDonald’s move to bolster wages, saying it wasn’t enough.

“We’ve showed up to work day after day in the middle of a global pandemic, risking our lives without proper P.P.E. or paid time off to keep your stores open and corporate profits flowing,” Doneshia Babbitt, a McDonald’s employee in St. Louis and union leader, said in a statement. “You’ve called us essential for over a year, but your announceme­nt today proves that you’ve seen us as disposable all along.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States