Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Fight for 15 campaign to target McDonald’s

- By Candice Choi

NEW YORK >> McDonald’s customers stopping in for a Big Mac on the eve of Tax Day may be greeted by demonstrat­ors calling for pay of $15 an hour and a union.

Labor organizers say they’re planning another day of strikes and protests exclusivel­y targeting McDonald’s stores in dozens of cities on April 14, following similar demonstrat­ions outside a variety of fast-food restaurant­s a year ago.

The move is intended to build on a campaign to lift wages and revitalize union enrollment by spotlighti­ng working conditions at the world’s biggest hamburger chain. Already, a wave of demonstrat­ions that began in New York City in late 2012 has made low pay a major political issue and helped spur the passage of higher local minimum wages around the country.

The “Fight for $15” campaign is being backed by the Service Employees Internatio­nal Union, whose members include nursing home workers and janitors who stand to benefit when the wage floor is raised. Although McDonald’s has been a primary target, organizers have expanded the campaign in hopes of mobilizing new swaths of workers including adjunct professors and airport workers.

For April 14, organizers say they’re focusing on McDonald’s because of its size and ability to influence pay practices throughout the economy.

“When McDonald’s starts to behave the right way, other companies are going to behave the right way,” said Kendall Fells, organizing director for the Fight for $15.

A McDonald’s representa­tive, Lisa McComb, said restaurant­s will remain open and “focus on providing an exceptiona­l experience for our customers.” She said McDonald’s provides employees with “lifelong skills, opportunit­ies for advancemen­t and education assistance.”

Turnout for the demonstrat­ions has varied around the country in the past, but has generally grown with each successive protest. In New York, crowds typically chant and beat drums outside a McDonald’s for about a half hour or briefly flood into stores before moving to another location. The actions are apparently having an impact on stores.

In court earlier this month, a lawyer for McDonald’s franchisee­s in New York described the pressure his clients felt from the “onslaught of investigat­ions and protests” brought on by organizers in recent years, with one franchisee even selling a store as a result. He described franchisee­s as “collateral damage” in the fight between McDonald’s and organizers.

About 90 percent of the more than 14,000 McDonald’s stores in the U.S. are run by franchisee­s.

The comments were made in opening statements for a trial stemming from unfair labor practice cases filed with the National Labor Relations Board, with organizers saying workers suffered retaliatio­n for participat­ing in strikes and demonstrat­ions. The trial could for the first time determine that McDonald’s is a “joint employer” for employees at franchised locations.

Scott Courtney, national organizing director for the SEIU, said he thinks it’s possible that McDonald’s might consider recognitio­n of a workers organizati­on in the next couple of years, which could prompt Burger King and Wendy’s to do the same with their workers.

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 ?? CRAIG RUTTLE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Labor organizers say they’re planning another day of strikes and protests exclusivel­y targeting McDonald’s stores in dozens of cities on following similar demonstrat­ions outside a variety of fast-food restaurant­s a year ago.
CRAIG RUTTLE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Labor organizers say they’re planning another day of strikes and protests exclusivel­y targeting McDonald’s stores in dozens of cities on following similar demonstrat­ions outside a variety of fast-food restaurant­s a year ago.

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