• Neuromancer@lemm.eeOPM
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    7 months ago

    https://www.franchiseherald.com/articles/77514/20240415/fosters-freeze-closes-locations-statewide-citing-new-wage-laws-contributing.htm

    Here is another article on it

    Navarro expressed that she and her former colleagues preferred to keep their old wages instead of losing their jobs altogether. “From what I’ve heard from my employees, we all would have chosen to stay at our previous wage because now we’re unemployed,” she told Fox Business.

    “Small businesses can’t handle a more than 120% increase in the minimum wage over the last decade. We’re all poorer than we were ten years ago, which shows that raising the minimum wage isn’t helping,” he commented to the media.

    The issue is that wages should have been increased more gradually over time and not rapidly when inflation was the highest and right after a pandemic. That is just dumb. People will only pay so much for fast food and that price is already exceeded.

    https://www.foxbusiness.com/lifestyle/mcdonalds-25-deal-viral-users-blame-californias-minimum-wage-increase-new-normal

    Yet the left claims they want to be more like Denmark but then balk when they find out Denmark doesn’t have a minimum wage.

    • Bongo_Stryker
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      7 months ago

      I see. So Navarro the assistant general manager, who was probably getting an above minimum wage, was cooperating in the exploitation of whoever was working for $4 an hour. No one can support themselves on $4 an hour in California, so it was likely teenagers or students who probably won’t be cast into the street or go hungry at the loss of such a low wage job.

      I agree wages should have been raised gradually over time. There was very strong and well organized opposition to such an idea, mainly among republicans but also democrat collaborators.

      Another difference between the USA and Denmark: trade unions. Unfortunately for US workers, there has been a long history of union busting in America. Coupled with deliberately weak labor laws, union busting goes on.

      To act like a wage increase is some kind of curse against fast food employees is to ignore the long history of anti-worker legislation and practices in this country, which is again, either foolish or deceitful.

        • Bongo_Stryker
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          7 months ago

          That happened the same day the new minimum wage law took effect, raising pay for fast food workers to $20 an hour from $4.

          Thats where I got the $4 from. It wasn’t clear me it was a 4 dollar raise. I admit I may have had a poor reading comprehension moment there, but in my defence I have a concussion and my eyes are a bit blurry, also I am trying to avoid my wife catching me on the internet, since she thinks I should be resting in a dark room. Still, that’s a poorly written sentence.

          • Neuromancer@lemm.eeOPM
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            7 months ago

            They were at 16 and went to 20.

            Hey I get the blurry eyes. I wake up with dry eyes. Sometimes I end up writing gibberish because of it. It looks fine to to me until I review it later.

            The issue is the speed of the raises and inflation. Customers won’t absorb higher prices.