FOR the past two years, Sean Caldwell, of Mount Airy, has
been struggling to support himself and raise his children on his $8-an-hour
part-time salary on the maintenance crew at McDonald's at Broad and Allegheny,
in North Philly.
It just hasn't been nearly enough - so he scrounges for
whatever else he can.
Caldwell, 35, started a neighborhood lawn-mowing business
and takes other odd jobs, such as cleaning out garages, but when he did his
2013 taxes he still saw that he'd made only $9,000. To bridge the gap,
Caldwell, like many workers in the fast-food industry, received food stamps and
other taxpayer-funded benefits, such as Medicaid.
This December, Caldwell saw a cable-TV news report about
workers from McDonald's and other fast-food restaurants in New York City
staging a one-day strike. "I was excited - I wanted to see where this
thing could go, if it could gain traction," he said. "I said, 'I sure
hope it comes to my city!' "
This week, Caldwell gets his wish. For the past month,
scores of fast-food workers and labor organizers have been working behind the
scenes to finally bring the national fast-food-workers movement - which seeks a
raise to $15 an hour and the right to unionize - to Philadelphia. It's
tentatively scheduled to kick off tomorrow with a job action outside McDonald's
on Broad Street near Girard Avenue.
Leaders of the Fast Food Forward movement - part of a broad
coalition of labor and community groups that has staged one-day strikes and
pickets in about 200 cities - now hope to place Philadelphia at the vanguard of
a push to raise the minimum wage and address America's growing income gap.
'One shot in history'
"This is their one shot in history to ultimately change
the conditions they live and work in," said Kendall Fells, the national
organizing director for Fast Food Forward. The group recently brought to Philly
some fast-food workers who'd staged job actions in Pittsburgh, to motivate
local would-be activists like Caldwell.
The launch of a fast-food-workers movement in Philadelphia
comes as the less-than-2-year-old effort has moved onto the front burner of
American politics, claiming a few small victories.
Earlier this year, President Obama made a call for a $10.10
minimum wage the centerpiece of his State of the Union address, stating that
"too many Americans are working more than ever just to get by, let alone
to get ahead." The president also mandated a $10.10 pay floor on some
federal contracts - a move that's been echoed by a handful of private
employers, including retail giant Gap, which recently announced a starting
salary of $10 an hour.
The push comes amid growing evidence that fast-food jobs -
once meant to be a stepping-stone for teens and others entering the labor
market - have become the primary source of income for a growing number of
adults, many of them raising a family. What's more, researchers say that U.S.
taxpayers are footing the bill for food stamps, Medicaid and other forms of
welfare to fill the gap between what these workers earn and what it costs to
survive.
A study last year by researchers at the University of
California, Berkeley, and the University of Illinois found that 52 percent of
fast-food workers receive some form of government assistance and that the
annual cost to taxpayers is nearly $7 billion. The report was subsidized by
Fast Food Forward, but other studies have found similar numbers.
Ken Jacobs, chairman of the UC Berkeley Labor Center who
worked on the study, said that the team found more fast-food jobs going to
adults with children than to teens living at home because of vanishing
middle-income openings. "Coming out of the recession, we've seen more
opportunities for low-wage service workers and for high-income professionals -
with the middle-income jobs disappearing," he said.
'Not counting $100 bills'
But a lobbyist for the restaurant industry in Pennsylvania
said that the demand for a $15 wage just doesn't jibe with the profit realities
of the fast-food business here - that many franchisees might have just one or
two franchises, clearing perhaps $50,000 apiece.
"They're not counting hundred-dollar bills in some back
room," said Melissa Bova, public-affairs representative for the
Pennsylvania Restaurant & Lodging Association.
Bova also said that Fast Food Forward and allied groups were
gaming the country's labor rules by essentially organizing workers but not in
the guise of a union, which would trigger certain labor-law restrictions.
"Businesses are playing by the rules, and these
organizations aren't," she said. In Philadelphia, Fast Food Forward is
working closely with organizers at the 120,000-member Local 32BJ of the Service
Employees International Union, or SEIU, as well as such community groups as
Youth United for Change.
CEO's salary tripled
Advocates for the fast-food workers say that multiple
studies have shown that a higher minimum wage - compared with a neighboring
jurisdiction - does not lead to job losses, that the impact on the price of
menu staples like a hamburger would be negligible and that workers deserve a
break today, just like new McDonald's CEO Don Thompson, whose salary tripled
when he took the job in 2013 to $13.8 million a year.
"With $15 and a union I could take care of myself and
be able to live and able to save money," said Robyn Richardson, a
sandwich-maker at Jimmy John's, in Center City, who joined the Philadelphia
fast-food movement after learning about it through a YouTube video that a
friend sent to her. "I don't know what savings are, because I live
paycheck to paycheck."
Richardson, 22, a graduate of Pottstown High School, said
that she and her 11-month-old son - who squirmed in his pajama bottoms and a
gray coat while his mom was interviewed at a Logan restaurant - will lose their
health insurance when he turns 1 in a few weeks.
Living with a sister nearby and eager to begin classes this
fall at the Art Institute of Philadelphia, Richardson also receives food stamps
and says that it's a struggle - especially when the nearest grocery store
selling cheaper baby formula is not close by. With a raise, she said, "I
wouldn't have to struggle to buy diapers."
Both she and Caldwell agree that working in a fast-food
restaurant is fast-paced, hectic, on-your-feet labor, but their main complaint
- in addition to low wages - is the unpredictability of their work schedules.
They frequently get scheduled for 30 hours a week or less, or lose hours by
being sent home early on slow days - and they worry that if they call out sick
their hours might get reduced.
Not surprisingly, there are complicating factors. Caldwell,
a graduate of Bishop McDevitt High School, in Montgomery County, who's worked a
variety of jobs while seeking a Harcum College associate degree, has fathered
eight children, two of whom live with him. He concedes to some "immature
decisions, but I don't regret any of my children." He said he sees all of
them every week, while he decides whether to pay for a son's football trip or
instead for bunk beds for three girls who now must sleep together.
"I'm always robbing Peter to pay Paul," said
Caldwell - but he, Richardson and other advocates for fast-food workers say
that a higher living wage and a union would mean better worker morale, which
would translate into better customer service and more sales.
They worry about risks of a one-day strike, but insist that
it's a battle worth waging.
"If you don't fight for it," said Caldwell,
"you're not going to get it - not in this capitalistic system."
Source: Philly.com
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