Business & Tech
$15 an Hour to Work at McDonald's? These Workers Say It's a Must
Fast food workers throughout the Bay Area protested their wages Wednesday, calling for a $15 per hour wage.

By Bay City News Service:
Workers throughout the Bay Area protested Wednesday and called for a $15 per hour wage, arguing that low pay forces many workers to rely on taxpayer-funded public assistance programs for survival.
Wednesdayβs action began in San Francisco with a 6 a.m. demonstration at a McDonaldβs franchise location at 24th and Mission streets, where fast food workers went on strike in solidarity with other protests happening around the country. Similar strikes were occurring Wednesday in Oakland, San Jose and San Rafael.
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Robert Reich, a professor at University of California at Berkeley and former U.S. Secretary of Labor in the Clinton administration, spoke at a demonstration in Oakland.
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Minimum wage earners are no longer teenagers looking for extra money. Theyβre adults and there are more of them than ever, many of whom are the primary breadwinners for their families, according to Reich.
βWhen employers are not paying their employees enough to get them and their families out of poverty, the rest of us are obligated to pay additional taxes to support food stamps, Medicaid and other public assistance,β Reich said. βIn a way, our tax dollars are subsidies for McDonaldβs, Wal-Mart and other companies that refuse to take that responsibility.β
βThe moral issue is clear,β Reich said. βNo one who is working full-time in America should be in poverty.β
McDonaldβs employee John DβAmanda said heβs on strike because he canβt make ends meet. Heβs working with demonstrators to ask for a wage increase to $15 per hour, as well as the opportunity to unionize.
DβAmanda said that many fast food workers are on food stamps, Medi-Cal or other forms of financial assistance.
βThatβs costing taxpayers money, both state and federal,β DβAmanda said. βAnd thatβs because fast food businesses refuse to pay a decent wage.β
DβAmanda lives and works in Oakland, but said he still has to travel a lengthy commute to get from his home in West Oakland to his job in the Fruitvale district because he takes two different bus routes with a long layover at the transfer and cannot afford BART fare.
βIβm barely able to afford the $75 monthly bus pass,β DβAmanda said. βThatβs a lot of money when youβre only working 25 hours a week. Even though Iβm making $12.25 an hour itβs still not enough.β
McDonaldβs issued a statement regarding the wage protests, saying that 90 percent of their franchise locations are independently owned and wages are set by the franchisee based on job level and local laws.
βRecently, McDonaldβs USA announced a wage increase and paid time off for employees at its company-owned restaurants and expanded educational opportunities for eligible employees at all restaurants,β McDonaldβs spokeswoman Lisa McComb said in a statement. βThis is an important and meaningful first step as we continue to look at opportunities that will make a difference for employees.β
McComb also said McDonaldβs respects the right to peacefully protest, but that their restaurants remain open.
(IMAGE via Shutterstock)
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