Seeking to increase pressure on McDonald’s, Wendy’s and
other fast-food restaurants, organizers of a movement demanding a $15-an-hour
wage for fast-food workers say they will sponsor one-day strikes in 100 cities
on Thursday and protest activities in 100 additional cities.
Protesters outside a Taco Bell in Warren, Mich., in July.
Many fast-food restaurant workers say they earn too little to live on.
As the movement struggles to find pressure points in its
quest for substantially higher wages for workers, organizers said strikes were
planned for the first time in cities like Charleston, S.C.; Providence, R.I.;
and Pittsburgh.
The protests have expanded greatly since November 2012, when
200 fast-food workers engaged in a one-day strike at more than 20 restaurants
in New York City, the first such walkout in the history of the nation’s
fast-food industry.
“There’s been pretty huge growth in one year,” said Kendall
Fells, one of the movement’s main organizers. “People understand that a one-day
strike is not going to get them there. They understand that this needs to
continue to grow.”
The movement, which includes the groups Fast Food Forward
and Fight for 15, is part of a growing union-backed effort by low-paid workers
— including many Walmart workers and workers for federal contractors — that
seeks to focus attention on what the groups say are inadequate wages.
The fast-food effort is backed by the Service Employees
International Union and is also demanding that restaurants allow workers to
unionize without the threat of retaliation.
Officials with the National Restaurant Association have said
the one-day strikes are publicity stunts. They warn that increasing pay to $15
an hour when the federal minimum wage is $7.25 would cause restaurants to rely
more on automation and hire fewer workers.
Industry officials say that only a small percentage of
fast-food jobs pay the minimum wage and that those are largely entry-level jobs
for workers under 25.
Backers of the movement for higher pay point to studies
saying that the average age of fast-food workers is 29 and that more than
one-fourth are parents raising children.
Simon Rojas, who earns $8.07 an hour working at a McDonald’s
in South Central Los Angeles, said he would join Thursday’s one-day strike.
“It’s very difficult to live off $8.07 an hour,” said Mr.
Rojas, 23, noting that he is often assigned just 20 or 25 hours of work a week.
“I have to live with my parents. I would like to be able to afford a car and an
apartment.”
Mr. Rojas said he had studied for a pharmacy technician’s
certificate, but he had been unable to save the $100 needed to apply for a
license.
On Aug. 29, fast-food strikes took place in more than 50
cities. This week’s expanded protests will be joined by numerous community,
faith and student groups, including USAction and United Students against
Sweatshops.
Source: The
New York Times
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