East Bay Times

California Labor Commission­er's Office says Panera not exempt from new statewide minimum wage law

- By Lindsey Holden

Only a very limited number of California bakery restaurant­s — if any — will be exempt from the state's fast food minimum wage law starting next month, according to standards the Labor Commission­er's Office released riday.

The regulation­s stipulate a restaurant can avoid paying the new $20-per-hour minimum wage only if they prepare and bake bread onsite to be sold as a standalone menu item.

This means the controvers­ial carve-out likely will not apply to Panera Bread, which bakes premade bread dough at its restaurant­s.

It remains unclear whether the state's new fast food council — which met for the first time Friday in Oakland — will weigh in on this interpreta­tion, which establishm­ents can take advantage of the exemption and why it exists.

The exemption came under fire after Bloomberg reported it may have come about because of Panera franchisee Gregg Flynn's relationsh­ip with Gov. Gavin Newsom.

Flynn, who owns 24 Paneras in California, has said he will pay his workers the new minimum wage starting next month. But confusion remains for the more than 160 other Panera locations in the state.

Who gets a minimum wage exemption?

Miles Locker, an attorney for the Labor Commission­er's Office, explained to council members and an audience full of fast-food workers that the agency agrees with the Newsom administra­tion's interpreta­tion of the law, which hinges on the word “produce.” “Here's the thing about statutes,” Locker said. “Sometimes a word that's used in it is (of) enormous significan­ce.”

Neither of the two bills related to the fast food council and the minimum wage include a clear definition of what it means to “produce” bread. The governor's administra­tion responded to the Bloomberg story by saying their attorneys did not believe the narrow bakery exemption applied to Panera.

“The bread exemption talks about an establishm­ent that produces bread,” Locker said. “Doesn't say `baking' bread, that `produces' bread. And as code of Federal Regulation­s says, that the production of bread process includes the production of the dough.”

Councilmem­ber Joseph Bryant, a vice president for Service Employees Internatio­nal Union, asked Locker whether the group would be able to provide exemptions. Locker did not answer the question directly, saying the council members will need to consult with their legal counsel and executive secretary.

Locker told the Sacramento Bee he did not want to “say yes or no” in regard to whether the council could interpret exemptions.

“Whether it covers anyone or not, I have no idea,” he said.

Chair Nick Hardeman, a member unaffiliat­ed with the fast food industry or labor, said the council will need to hire staff before delving into exemptions. The group's primary duties will be determinin­g additional wage increases and making and developing “minimum working standards.”

“There's some ambiguity there on the council's role,” Hardeman said of the exemptions. “So I think once we get that staff person hired, we'll dig in to see if that's another issue that we might have to take a look at.”

The nine-member council, made up of fast food industry leaders, workers and labor union advocates, will set standards around minimum pay and will make recommenda­tions regarding working conditions that the Labor Commission­er's Office and other state agencies will need to approve through a rule-making process.

The council's direction and the new minimum wage, which takes effect April 1, apply to fast-food restaurant­s with 60 or more locations nationwide. The group must meet at least every six months.

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 ?? CAMERON CLARK — CCLARK@SACBEE.COM/THE SACRAMENTO BEE ?? Fast-food cooks and cashiers protest outside of a McDonald's in North Highlands on Aug. 16, 2022, to show their support for Assembly Bill 257, which will take affect April 1.
CAMERON CLARK — CCLARK@SACBEE.COM/THE SACRAMENTO BEE Fast-food cooks and cashiers protest outside of a McDonald's in North Highlands on Aug. 16, 2022, to show their support for Assembly Bill 257, which will take affect April 1.
 ?? PAUL KITAGAKI JR. STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Sandra Jauregui, center, a fastfood worker for 14 years, and other workers in the industry rally at the state Capitol in Sacramento on Nov. 15, 2022, demanding that fast-food companies such as McDonald's, In-N-Out Burger and Chipotle stop seeking to repeal Assembly Bill 257.
PAUL KITAGAKI JR. STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Sandra Jauregui, center, a fastfood worker for 14 years, and other workers in the industry rally at the state Capitol in Sacramento on Nov. 15, 2022, demanding that fast-food companies such as McDonald's, In-N-Out Burger and Chipotle stop seeking to repeal Assembly Bill 257.

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