Posted on 11/03/2017 8:57:51 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
Two years ago, a popular pizza shop in Boston opened its doors promising fair wages to its employees. On Wednesday, Dudley Dough announced it will close at the end of the year, the Boston Globe reported.
A fair wage, also called a living wage, is a wage that is high enough to provide a normal standard of living.
Regulars at the restaurant say theyre losing a community resource and a singular business based on a premise of economic justice and healthy food, according to the Globe report.
Whats the story? The restaurant pitched itself as pizza with a purpose, according to the Globe, the restaurant offered above-average pay as well as culinary and leadership training.
Dudley Dough is an offshoot of Haley House, a nonprofit organization based in Bostons South End and Roxbury neighborhoods, that provides food and housing to low-income residents.
The shop is popular among residents in the area, but its not breaking even and that puts stress on Haley House.
The challenge for Dudley Dough was to support itself, Bing Broderick, Haley House executive director told the Globe. The pizza shop attempted to put a social enterprise model into action.
An analysis of the businesss operations and trends, the Haley House board determined that it could not continue to subsidize the pizza shop without jeopardizing its own efforts, according to The Globe.
I dont think anyone is looking at it as a failure, said Luther Pinckney, a team leader at Dudley Dough, which is in the Bruce C. Bolling Municipal Building. Its an experiment, and some very good things came out of that, such as skill-building for staff and being in this building at this time of gentrification and change in this community.
The wage battle A fair wage is just one piece of the social enterprise model that has businesses and employees, and politicians, pitted against each other. Additional issues include paid leave and other benefits.
Currently, the federal minimum wage is $7.25 an hour and it hasnt increased since 2009, according to the Department of Labor. Some states and areas have higher minimum wages, with the highest being $12.50 in the District of Columbia. Businesses in states with higher state minimums are required to pay employees at the higher adopted rate.
You probably remember in 2012 when about 200 fast-food workers in New York City took to the streets demanding higher pay.
Outside a Burger King on 34th Street, several dozen workers and their supporters chanted, How can we survive on seven twenty-five? the New York Times reported. Minimum wage in New York state was $7.25 at that time.
New York raised its minimum wage to $8 in 2014. It has incrementally increased annually since. The current minimum wage varies across the state from $9.70 to $13 an hour based on geographical location and, in New York City, employer size. More increases are set through 2021, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.
Can the fair wage model work? It depends on so many factors that its hard to say. Factors include the size of the business, its location and number of employees.
Last month, Target announced an increase to its minimum hourly wage.
All employees will be paid at least $11 an hour, starting next month, up from the current $10, and will see it rise to $15 by the end of 2020, USA Today reported. The Minneapolis-based chain said the increase also applies to seasonal workers.
The chains last major wage increase was in 2016, according to USA Today, when it went to $10 an hour.
We care about and value the more than 323,000 individuals who come together every day with an absolute commitment to serving our guest, CEO Brian Cornell said in a statement.
Walmart cashiers start at $9.17, Costco cashier assistants at $12.56 and Amazon fulfillment center workers at $12.42, reported USA Today.
But what about Chipotles recent announcement? Chipotles fast-casual restaurant chain is struggling.
Besides its food safety problems and natural disasters in some parts of the country causing setbacks, some say the chains biggest problem is its labor costs.
CNBC reported last week that Bank of America Merrill Lynch downgraded Chipotle and cut its earnings targets for 2018 and 2019, citing high labor costs as the companys biggest issue.
The average hourly wage for a Chipotle crew member is $9.54, according to Indeed.
Whats the solution? You decide. Most people would agree that minimum wage jobs arent meant to be a career.
Proponents of fair wages say higher wages increase employee loyalty and yield happier workers. But higher minimum wages can put stress on businesses causing them to close, which puts people out of work.
Dudley Dough is a popular place, according to the Globe, and its employees are being paid a fair wage. However, being popular isnt going to keep its doors open or its people employed.
But if their “experiment” had created a thriving business, would they have declared their hypothesis a “success”?
Yes, they would have.
And so since it did not thrive, their disproven hypothesis shows that their effort was a “failure”.
They might have called it a success, but scientifically that’s not the right term. They successfully proved their hypothesis, or they successfully disproved it. Either one is really a success. The term failure would imply the experiment wasn’t truly unbiased, and did the opposite of the intended result. In which case it’s not actually an experiment.
I’m just arguing semantics :p It’s a boring drill weekend!
The wrong people were in charge. Y'know, the same reason communism always fails.
RATS aren't smart enough to understand the business model of a lemonade stand...
Without profits, there is no sustainability, no capital for expansion, no return for the owners, etc.
This guy missed the make-a-profit step and went straight to the living wage, social equality and community reinvestment direction.
He forgot he had to stay in business. Reminds me of the epic failure of the 20th Century Motor Corp. in Ayn Rand's "Atlas Shrugged". Liberals kids of the deceased owner inherit a successful business and run it into the ground trying to practice socialism as a business model.
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