McDonald's,
other fast-food workers, protest ahead of annual meeting
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[May 20, 2015]
By Mary Wisniewski
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Thousands of
McDonald's workers seeking a minimum wage of $15 per hour and the right
to unionize are expected to swarm the fast-food giant's headquarters for
two days of protests that will coincide with the fast-food chain's
annual meeting on Thursday.
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Protests by low-wage fast-food and retail workers have helped fuel
a national debate about pay levels. Companies such as McDonald's
Corp <MCD.N> and Wal-Mart Stores Inc <WMT.N> are raising starting
pay and cities like Seattle and Chicago are boosting their
respective minimum wages over time.
Oak Brook, Illinois, police are preparing for thousands of
demonstrators on Wednesday at the chain's suburban headquarters west
of Chicago, and a smaller crowd in the hundreds on Thursday, said
Officer Garrett Church.
In one of his first major announcements as the new chief executive
of McDonald's, Steve Easterbrook last month said that starting pay
at company-operated restaurants would be set at $1 above the locally
mandated minimum wage, beginning on July 1. By the end of 2016,
McDonald's expects the average hourly pay rate to be above $10 per
hour.
Those increases only apply to some 90,000 workers at the roughly
1,500 U.S. restaurants McDonald's operates. They do not affect
around 660,000 other restaurant workers employed by U.S. McDonald's
franchisees who operate about 12,500 restaurants.
Some workers were quick to criticize the announcement. They said it
was too little to make a real difference and affected too few
workers.
The decision also angered some McDonald's restaurant operators, who
said it would put additional cost pressure on franchisees struggling
to maintain profits at a time when sales have been weakened by
intense competition and internal missteps that have slowed service.
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This week's protests are backed by the Service Employees
International Union (SEIU), which has spent tens of millions of
dollars so far on a three-year campaign to improve conditions for
low-wage retail and fast-food workers.
Twenty-nine states and Washington, D.C. currently have minimum wages
above the federal minimum of $7.25 per hour, according to the
National Conference of State Legislatures.
(Additional reporting by Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles; Editing by
Lisa Lambert)
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