Hundreds Of Fast Food Workers Arrested While Striking For Higher Wages

88m3

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Y ALAN PYKE POSTED ON SEPTEMBER 5, 2014 AT 11:05 AM

fast-food-strike-arrest-9-4-14-AP-638x425.jpg

CREDIT: AP

Hundreds of striking fast food workers and their supporters were arrested Thursday whileprotesting to demand higher wages and the right to unionize, strike organizers say. Workers walked off the job in 159 different cities on what was at least the 10th day of strikes in the 21 months since the campaign for a $15 hourly wage and full labor rights began in New York City just after Thanksgiving 2012.


The arrests were scattered around the country and included 50 in Chicago, 42 in Detroit, 11 in Little Rock, 10 in Las Vegas, and 52 in Kansas City, according to a partial list provided by organizers. Police in Detroit reportedly ran out of handcuffs at one point while arresting peaceful strikers who were blocking traffic during their demonstration. Rep. Gwen Moore (D-WI) was among the 25 workers and supporters arrested in Milwaukee, and several other members of the House Progressive Caucus joined worker actions in various cities. Moore said she was given a $691 ticket for disorderly conduct after she and other protesters defused to clear the road they were blocking.

With 159 cities striking on Thursday, fast food workers have approximately doubled the size of the battlefield over the past year. Strikes hit 60 cities in August 2013, the first day to see strikes in a double-digit number of cities. A December strike day featured 100 cities, and about 150 cities saw walkouts in May. Over the nearly two years since the campaign began, the strikes have leaped from New York and other northern cities to every corner of the continental U.S.

But beyond the geographic spread, Thursday’s strikes are the first example of a tactical escalation that workers and organizers promised at a convention earlier this summer. A July gathering of more than 1,300 fast food workers produced a resolution to begin using civil disobedience and nonviolent protest to advance their cause.

“We had over 100 people arrested, but however they respected every police officer,” Rev. W. J. Rideout told Detroit’s ABC affiliate WXYZ on Thursday. “And we also chanted, ‘Police need a raise also.’ EMS need a raise, firefighters need a raise. So we’re not against anyone here,we’re against the corporations, we’re against McDonald’s.”

McDonald’s was recently found to be responsible for its workers’ treatment by the National Labor Relations Board. That might sound obvious, but for decades the fast food industry has used franchise agreements to shrug off legal liability for labor violations by the owner-operators who run the vast majority of fast food chain stores. That legal facade crumbled this summer after workers’ attorneys presented evidence that McDonald’s is responsible forsetting the rules that lead store owners to commit wage theft by falsifying time sheets, forcing people to work off the clock, and requiring workers to pay for their own uniform upkeep, among other widespread company practices.

The unrelenting worker pressure on the ground and the gradual shift in how labor regulators treat the fast food business model could make it difficult for these companies to maintain the status quo for much longer. At present, CEOs are paid 1,200 times more than workers in the industry. Frontline fast food workers — the vast majority of whom are adults, many with families to support — earn poverty wages that require them to turn to public assistance programs to survive despite having a job. This taxpayer subsidy of low fast food wages costs the American public well over a billion dollars a year (and when accounting for similar dynamics in other low-wage industries, the cost is closer to a quarter-trillion dollars). Worse, even those meager wages often don’t get paid properly. Nine out of 10 fast food workersreports being victimized by some form of wage theft.

http://thinkprogress.org/economy/2014/09/05/3563673/fast-food-strikes-arrests/
 

Ethnic Vagina Finder

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Lol @ 15 for flipping burgers... Fukk y'all hell no!

How about real servers and labour jobs?

At least they got the heart to protest. Imagine if millions of workers in other industries did the same thing. They not the only ones underpaid. American workers have basically accepted the fact that they're getting screwed over while companies make millions of dollars off of their labor. They can downsize/fire employees whenever they want and we don't do nothing be grateful on payday. People making low and high six figures have the luxury of negotiating salary and perks. At the end of the day most everyday workers aren't even looked at as employees. They're disposable assets to a company.
 

merklman

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How about they try and get better jobs. Fast food working pretty much is an out of high school/part time job
 

KOohbt

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If only they were smart enough to put there money together and start their own businesses.
 

Yapdatfool

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If only they were smart enough to put there money together and start their own businesses.
:shaq2: Not when 2/3 of all businesses fail within the first year. 44-40 percent chance of being stable, not even being successful or profitable, just existing past one year. Especially in the food biz :dahell:.

Business is a lot like gambling, you only hear about the successes, never the failures.

Employees have every right to try to collectively bargain.

Not in America. It's more take it or leave it than bargaining. The swiss collectively bargain, not us.

They don't have much leverage

Workers on strike never did have leverage, they always were easily replaced by scabs.
 

Meta Reign

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Lol @ 15 for flipping burgers... Fukk y'all hell no!

How about real servers and labour jobs?
What people like you don't seem to understand is that just as wages can be artificially high, they can also be artificially low. These people have the right to unionize and negotiate for higher wages. Our laws keep them from achieving that, so at some point you have to fight the law.
 

GetInTheTruck

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10 dollars an hour minimum is fair and they should be content with that for what they do.

Back in 04 I was loading and unloading trucks of AC's, stoves, refrigerators, washers, and other heavy appliances from 7am-5pm everyday for 9.25 an hour. That was hard ass work, especially during these hot ass NY summers.

"you want fries with that?" is not hard work.
 
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