Posted on 12/01/2012 7:15:07 PM PST by DeaconBenjamin
Hundreds of fast food workers at New York City branches of McDonald's, Burger King and other big-name chains have staged a walk out in protest of low wages.
The strike, organised by pressure group New York Communities for Change (NYCC), was part of an attempt to gain union recognition for staff at fast food outlets in the city.
"So many people in our neighbourhoods work at fast food restaurants and make poverty wages so low people can't put food on the table, put clothes on their kids' back or even afford the train ride to work."
The group staged a number of demonstrations across the city, culminating at the McDonald's in Times Square.
NYCC organizers have held discussions with employees about forming a new union, the Fast Food Workers Committee, for several months. Attempts have been made to sign them up to a petition demanding that workers be granted the freedom to join a union, and a raise the minimum wage from $7.25 to $15 an hour.
McDonald's said in a statement: "McDonald's values our employees and has consistently remained committed to them, so in turn they can provide quality service to our customers." It added that most of its franchisees offered competitive benefits.
Some 50,000 workers are involved in the fast food industry across the city, with many paid the median hourly wage of $8.90 (nationally, it is $8.76). Low-pay campaigners estimated in 2010 that an adult with one child living in the least expensive area of the city needs to make $21.85 an hour to be self-sufficient. The average fast food worker in New York earns about $11,000 a year.
(Excerpt) Read more at guardian.co.uk ...
Inflation is hurting everyone.
What state are you in?
Fantasyland?
“You make 11k per year and have money left over?”
Sure do! I just got Christmas presents for the special people in my life!
You could not be considered the norm by any stretch of the imagination. You coming in here bloating how you easily live on 11k a year is a joke.
I give it a 4 on the honking hoot scale.
“A guy named Roy Kroc started McDonalds. When he opened his first store, he worked the cash register himself. He was a small entrepreneur, just like you were, with no reputation of any kind.”
We weren’t talking about Ray Kroc. Who didn’t actually start McDonalds. That was the Mcdonalds brothers in San Beradino.
Ray Krok became their franchiser and later bought them out. He already had a reputation in the food industry as the owner of a company that sold milk shake mixers. He was also a salesman for food service supplys. Napkins and cups and such.
It’s certainly not the same chain it was then. Now it’s fully established with Billions and Billions served.
You run your own business. I believe you mentioned being in the Dallas area. I have no idea what regulations your business are forced to operate under.
I do have some idea what building trade wages are going to cost you. Although I am a few years out of date.
Should you determine there are opportunities worth pursuing in NYC.and decide to open a business there.
Everything will cost more, except in this case labor.
Wages have largely stagnated for at least the last 15 years.
If prices have to be raised to pay the employees, well that’s the cost of being a business owner.
The business has a couple of choices. They can raise wages or they risk having the workers unionize.
And I’d still bet that even should the workers unionize, MickyDs stays open. When the price of fuel spikes, prices across the board go up. Consumers piss and moan and maybe a few even cut back, but mostly they piss and moan and keep to their routine.
Business doesn’t offer gasoline sellers 40 cents on the dollar for their fuel with the argument that they can take that or put me out of business and not sell any gas at all.
I wonder what kind of volume a busy MickyDs in NYC does in a shift.
“What state are you in? Fantasyland?”
The greatest state in the nation. :)
Boom Like That - Mark Knopfler
I’m going to San Bernardino ring-a-ding-ding
Milkshake mixers that’s my thing, now
These guys bought a heap of my stuff
And I gotta see a good thing sure enough, now
Or my name’s not Kroc that’s Kroc with a ‘K’
Like ‘crocodile’ but not spelled that way, yeah
It’s dog eat dog rat eat rat
Kroc-style boom, like that
The folks line up all down the street
And I’m seeing this girl devour her meat, now
And then I get it, wham as clear as day
My pulse begins to hammer and I hear a voice say
These boys have got this down
Oughtta be a one of these in every town
These boys have got the touch
It’s clean as a whistle and it don’t cost much
Wham, bam you don’t wait long
Shake, fries patty, you’re gone
And how about that friendly name?
Heck, every little thing oughtta stay the same
Or my name’s not Kroc that’s Kroc with a ‘K’
Like ‘crocodile’ but not spelled that way, now
It’s dog eat dog rat eat rat
Kroc-style boom, like that
You gentlemen ought to expand
You’re going to need a helping hand, now
So, gentlemen well, what about me?
We’ll make a little business history, now
Or my name’s not Kroc call me Ray
Like ‘crocodile’ but not spelled that way, now
It’s dog eat dog rat eat rat
Kroc-style boom, like that
Well we build it up and I buy ‘em out
But, man they made me grind it out, now
They open up a new place flipping meat
So I do, too right across the street
I got the name I need the town
They sell up in the end and it all shuts down
Sometimes you gotta be an s.o.b.
You want to make a dream reality
Competition? send ‘em south
If they’re gonna drown
Put a hose in their mouth
Do not pass ‘go’ go straight to hell
I smell that meat hook smell
Or my name’s not kroc that’s Kroc with a ‘K’
Like ‘crocodile’ but not spelled that way, now
It’s dog eat dog rat eat rat
Kroc-style boom, like that
You’re from California. You folks know nothing about flyover country. You have the haughty, “this is reality” down just pat.
As Mr. Reagan once said - “you know so much that isn’t so”.
Yes, I live on about that every year. And yes, I live quite confortably on it. :)
Where else would be the greatest state of the nation.
I’ve read a bit about Ray Kroc.
This pretty much follows all the things I’ve read.
Thanks Winflier, you’re so right. I had a lapse there didn’t I. Chalk up one more person who has a massive loss, if this union thing catches on.
Thanks GeronL.
“Yes, I live on about that every year. And yes, I live quite confortably on it. :)”
Not trying to be contrary here, but what would happen if say 100,000 people left NYC or Caili and moved to your town because it’s cheaper to live.
That’s my exact point. Thank you. TX is not CA or NYC. If the people of NYC want to pay their McDonalds workers 20/hr, fine by them.
The problem is when they try to jack up the minimum wage laws to screw everyone else over.
If they came here? They’d either:
1, get bored and leave, or:
2, get a gun, go to church and love it here. :)
I left a socialist hellhole myself to come down to Texas, and I couldn’t be happier.
In what kind of bizarro world is that true? Soviet Russia?
Bob, I've tried my best to give you the benefit of the doubt here, but the more you talk, the more I'm convinced that you honestly don't grasp the fundamental economics at work here. That's curiously out of step for someone who claims to have run a business for five years.
Perhaps you started your business with a built-in customer base, and never had to duke it out with the local competition. I've seen guys whose businesses were built on that model. When they lost one or more of their stable clients, they couldn't cope with the real forces at work in the marketplace. I think of such entrepreneurs as babies crawling through a war zone, somehow avoiding the mayhem all around them.
I don't know if that was you or not, but you don't talk like someone who's successfully dealt with the real world forces that control the free market. You sound a lot more like an armchair theorist with a liberal bent.
You hold the same sort of assumptions that most liberals hold, namely that any job ought to pay a 'living wage', and that businesses are obligated to do whatever it takes to pay people at some arbitrarily determined level, just because the mob says they should.
You also assume (like liberals do) that businesses can simply raise their prices to accommodate higher wage demands from their employees, and that employees can force a business to do that by organizing a union.
Those are communistic viewpoints, and very strange for a conservative.
This has been interesting, but I think I'm done now. You've got some fixed viewpoints that aren't shifting in this conversation. That says to me that your utopian ideas of how a free market operates, are more real to you than the real world facts I'm presenting.
Later.
“Thats my exact point. Thank you. TX is not CA or NYC. If the people of NYC want to pay their McDonalds workers 20/hr, fine by them.”
I agree that this is more of a regional issue.
The issue IMO of a federal minimum wage is that it’s a big city solution that doesn’t work in rural areas.
Like your personal example of living well on less.
I know small town folks who have combined incomes of 50-60K a year and they live well.
A mandated minimum wage of say $12 an hour would seriously damage a lot of small town economies.
By that same notion though, you can’t expect a small town solution to remedy stagnant wages and skyrocketing costs of living in a place like NYC.
The argument that says they should just move is a bit simple minded. It’s like saying if you don’t have enough...well make more money.
“you cant expect a small town solution to remedy stagnant wages and skyrocketing costs of living in a place like NYC.”
Let me ask you a question.
If someone came up to you and said that gravitational acceleration was over 10 m/s in their location, what would you say to them and why? You’d say that was bogus because, “gravity works the same everywhere”.
See, this is the thing about economics. Economics works, everywhere. The reason why NYC is doing so poorly is because they indulge in bad economics. Everyone can live like I do - the problem in NYC is that the law is set up to deliberately defy economics.
If NYC were to bring their minimum wage down to where it was nationally, NYC would actually see their COL go down.
“You hold the same sort of assumptions that most liberals hold, namely that any job ought to pay a ‘living wage’, and that businesses are obligated to do whatever it takes to pay people at some arbitrarily determined level, just because the mob says they should.”
Then I’m obviously not being clear.
I didn’t say anything about anybody being owed a living wage.
What I said is if the business can’t pay wages that workers are willing to work for and the workers have an option to unionize then they will.
We were discussing a particular group of workers in a particular industry in a particular location.
Your business expertise (unless your business is fastfood burgers)doesn’t really carry over in this situation.
No I don’t think businesses can charge whatever they feel like charging. If McDs value meals went to $15 they’d certainly stop selling as many, but they can raise the price by $1 or so per meal...Have you ever bought a value meal at the airport? They run about $1.50 more. I’m guessing that’s because retail space cost more at the airport.
You said I seem to have a liberal slant. I think the same thing about your argument. That one size fits all.
A solution to a building trade problem in Dallas has little bearing on a fastfood issue in NYC except in the most theoretical sense.
I’d also note that with stagnant wages and rising costs of living, more people are going to turn to government assistance just to make ends almost meet. And that’s even if they are working a job.
You can say that it shouldn’t be that way, but that’s the reality of it.
“This was never about wage busting. It was about a business model that adults decided to crash, and now complain about. There is a considerable difference.”
I would say that whatever the earlier business model, that’s not the case now.
If it were meant as a kids job, they should have maintained the practice of hiring kids.
I’m actually part of the problem as I don’t eat fast food, but my kids do sometimes. The McDs nearest our house only has adult workers and their English is not very good.
I don’t know if they’re illegals ot guest workers.
I agree with the other points you made.
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