Ammon News - AMMONNEWS - Days after largest-ever fast-food strike, McDonald’s workers from three-dozen cities to travel to Golden Arches’ headquarters for major protest
(Chicago, IL) – Hundreds of McDonald’s workers from more than three-dozen cities announced Monday that they will travel to the company’s annual shareholder meeting in Oak Brook, IL to escalate their call for $15 an hour and the right to form a without retaliation. More than 2,000 supporters, including fast-food workers, community members, clergy and elected officials, will join the McDonald’s workers at the company’s corporate headquarters, just days after strikes and protests rocked 230 cities around the world in what MSNBC called the “biggest fast-food strike ever.”
“We’re taking our demands directly to McDonald’s doorstep because the company refuses to listen to us,” said Rorie Crawford, a McDonald’s worker from Greensboro, NC who makes $7.35 an hour and who last week walked off her job. “With more than $5 billion in profits, we know McDonald’s can raise our wages. And we know they should – it’s good for the company, for shareholders, for workers and for our economy. It’s time they do.”
McDonald’s annual shareholder meeting, scheduled for Thursday, approaches as investors and company officials are increasingly realizing they need to respond to workers’ call for higher pay. In a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, the company admitted that the growing and focus on inequality might force them to raise wages. And in response to class-action lawsuits against McDonald’s that allege widespread and systematic wage theft, the company announced it was launching a comprehensive investigation.
Scrutiny on the company has intensified since the release of a report earlier this month by Demos showing that the fast-food industry has the largest disparity betweenworker and CEO pay. New York City Comptroller Scott Stringer said that excessive pay disparities “pose a risk to share owner value," and that conversations around inequality should move into the boardrooms of profitable fast-food companies.
USA Today noted that the growing worker movement would be front-and-center at McDonald’s annual shareholder meeting, naming it “the issue that just won’t go away.” And Business Insider wrote that the company was barring reporters from the annual meeting because of “the pressure the company is feeling from shareholders, franchisees, and especially workers — who are planning to protest at the meeting in Oakbrook, Illinois.”
“The problems of pay disparity in fast food extend beyond the industry to affect the rest of our economy,” said Catherine Ruetschlin, Demos Policy Analyst and author of the report Fast Food Failure. “Even the industry leader, McDonald’s, has acknowledged that rising inequality is a risk to their bottom line, as companies see the negative consequences of pay disparity appear as operational issues, legal challenges, and diminishing worker and customer satisfaction. Those consequences pose a real risk to shareholders, who have a material interest in addressing the practices thatdrive income inequality, undermine the long-term performance of the firm, and inhibit stability and growth in the economy overall.”
As McDonald’s U.S. sales are slumping, the company is facing growing criticism from both customers and franchisees. A recent Harris poll found that McDonald’s reputation among customers fell sharply, and surveys that a majority of franchise owners are upset with the company, describing their relationship as “poor” and giving McDonald’s the lowest ratings it’s seen in 12 years.
In the past year, McDonald’s was widely ridiculed for its sample budget for workers, which required them to get a second job to make ends meet; itsemployee advice site that told workers to sing away stress, take small bites of food to avoid hunger and not eat fast food; an employee hotline that encouraged workers to apply for public assistance; and findings that the company costs U.S. taxpayers $1.2 billion annually in public assistance for its workers.
McDonald’s workers who will protest at the annual meeting, and who have now struck six times in the past 18 months, are challenging the company’s outdated notion that their workers are teenagers looking for pocket change. Research shows that a majority of fast-food workers are adults, many of whom are struggling to raise children on a median wage of $8.94.
“McDonald's, can you hear us?” asked Alexis Matthews, a McDonald’s worker and expectant mother from Memphis, Tennessee who makes $7.50 an hour and who went on strike last week. “We are fed up, and McDonald's needs to wake up and realize that while their workers may once have been teenagers looking for pocket change, we are now mothers and fathers trying to support our families.”
A campaign that started in New York City in November 2012, with 200 fast-food workers walking off their jobs demanding $15 and the right to form a without retaliation, has since spread to more than 150 cities in every region of the country, including the South—and now around the world. The growing fight for $15 has been credited with elevating the debate around inequality in the U.S. When Seattle's mayor proposed a $15 minimum wage earlier this month, Businessweek said he was “adopting the rallying cry of fast-food workers.”
The spread of the worker movement overseas should cause further alarm. International fast-food restaurants are expected to expand at four times the rate of U.S. businesses, according to a recent Merrill Lynch report. And while US sales slump, companies like McDonald’s are relying on growth overseas to boost their bottom lines more than ever.