The Sun (San Bernardino)

Mandates will only make food expensive

- By Kelly Seyarto

The fast-food industry is about to change.

Assembly Bill 1228 (Holden, 2023) went into effect this month and imposes a $20 minimum wage in the fast-food sector. Democrats in Sacramento pushed this policy, conducted negotiatio­ns behind closed doors, and Gov. Gavin Newsom signed it into law.

The implementa­tion of this bill will have serious consequenc­es for both small business owners, employees, and consumers. Instead of enabling our small businesses to be successful and create jobs in California, this bill does just the opposite and furthers California’s inflation woes.

The destructiv­e law took effect on April 1. Ironically the new law was implemente­d on the very same day the Orange County Register reported that California is No. 1. in the U.S. for unemployme­nt.

According to California’s nonpartisa­n legislativ­e analyst, that’s over one million unemployed workers.

Restaurant operators and Senate Republican­s have been sounding the alarm about the negative impacts of this policy for months. Besides the serious consequenc­es for both small business owners and employees, the implementa­tion of this bill will be detrimenta­l to economic mobility for those who need it most. Instead of more money, for many, it means unemployme­nt.

Here in California job creation is down, unemployme­nt is up, prices continue to escalate for just about everything, and the State is grappling with an unthinkabl­y massive deficit. Exacerbati­ng all this is that taxpayers and employers are fleeing the state, citing high prices and burdensome taxes and regulation­s.

We’re in a slowing economy. We need to enable employers to be successful so they can expand their businesses and put people to work. Bills that place more burdens on employers — like the fast-food worker wage hike — do just the opposite, stifling economic growth, increasing job cutbacks, and ramping up unemployme­nt. Some are already opting to replace workers with automation.

Many fast-food franchisee­s already have announced price increases and begun layoffs. Pizza Hut franchisee­s have announced plans to lay off around 1,200 workers. Chipotle, Jackin-the-Box, and McDonald’s plan to raise prices. Some Starbucks have already increased certain drinks by as much as 50 cents.

Keep in mind that many franchisee­s are small, familyowne­d operations. They made it through the pandemic shutdowns, but they may not make it through this.

Ultimately, Governor Newsom, Democrat lawmakers, and special interests are completely responsibl­e for job losses in the fast-food industry and collapsing businesses in California.

Ultimately, they will also bear responsibi­lity for the ripple effects of all their bad policies, which have intentiona­lly raised the cost of living in this state to soul-crushing levels and pushed taxpayers and job creators to flee or avoid California.

Only 15% of California­ns can afford to buy a home, and if they can, finding affordable insurance is next to impossible as major insurers have stopped writing new policies in the state. Gasoline prices remain highest in the nation, and electricit­y rates are almost twice as high as the national average.

Now we are adding fast food to this list.

When will they ever learn? We need to support employers in California, not make it harder for them to do business and create jobs. We need to uphold the entreprene­urial spirit that not only has always been a hallmark of this state but also provides the backbone — and tax base — of our economy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States