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Inscrit le: 27 Sep 2011 Messages: 7915 Localisation: England
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Posté le: Mer Oct 16, 2013 1:28 am Sujet du message: as a McDonald's cashier |
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{'Super-size' strike: Why fast-food workers walked #file_links[D:\keywords2.txt,1,S] out for higher wages}
Subscribe Today to the MonitorClick Here for your FREE 30 DAYS ofThe Christian Science MonitorWeekly Digital EditionWorkers in at least 35 cities are expected to picket chains like McDonald’s, Burger #file_links[D:\keywords5.txt,[url=http://www.toms-shoes-sale.com]Toms Shoes Outlet[/url],1,S] King, K #file_links[D:\keywords4.txt,1,[url=http://www.toms-shoes-sale.com]Cheap Toms[/url],S] entucky Fried Chicken,[url=http://www.toms-shoes-sale.com]Toms Shoes Sale[/url], and Wendy’s to demand higher wages and the right to unionize.In July, about 2,200 fast-food workers participated in a one-day strike in seven cities, the largest effort to date. That followed nearly a year of protests that originated in New York City in November 2012. #file_links[D:\keywords2.txt,1,S] RECOMMENDED: 10 fast foods that have disappeared“Hold the burgers! Hold the fries! Make our wages super-size!” chanted strikers outside a McDonald’s in Detroit Thursday.Protesters are calling for $15-an-hour wages, more than double the federal minimum wage of $7.25 an hour, which would increase the annual earnings of a full-time employee from $15,000 a year to $31,000 a year.While a young workforce and quick turnover have traditionally characterized the fast-food industry, protesters say the Great Recession caused more parents and older workers to rely on fast-food jobs. But they can’t survive on current wages, they say.Want your top political issues explained? Get customized DC Decoder updates.“Because of the difficulty of getting jobs in general … for people with relatively modest education levels, you have a lot of people working in these companies who are trying to support a family based upon their earnings alone,” Ronald Ehrenberg, a professor of industrial and labor relations and economics at Cornell University, told Time. “That’s very, very difficult to do.”Industry officials counter that the demographics of fast-food workers haven’t substantially changed. Officials at the National Restaurant Association say only 5 percent of restaurant employees earn the federal minimum wage and that 7 of 10 fast-food workers earning an entry-level wage are under the age of 25.Moreover, the number of strikers is also only a small percentage of the roughly 2.4 million fast-food workers in the United States, opponents say.Supporters point to a study by the Economic Policy Institute that calculated that 88 percent of workers in jobs paying less than $10 an hour are older than 20, and a third are older than 40, reports USA Today.At the federal level, President Obama and some members of Congress have pressed for a raise in the minimum wage – but nowhere near the protesters’ demands of $15 an hour. Mr. Obama supports a $9-an-hour minimum wage.On Thursday, Labor Secretary Thomas Perez saidthe fast-food strikes show the need to raise the minimum wage.A complicating factor in the fast-food wage fight is that most Mickey-Ds and Burger Kings are franchised, and local owners set wages.Here is a sampling of voices from protesters across the country:Chicago“Nancy Salgado, 26, of Chicago, earns $8.25 an hour, Illinois' minimum wage, as a McDonald's cashier, though she has worked for the company for 10 years. Ms. Salgado, who has no health benefits, says she relies on Medicaid to provide health care #file_links[D:\keywords3.txt,1,S] for her two children and often skimps on their clothing purchases,” reports USA Today.1|2NextAbout #file_links[D:\keywords1.txt,1,S] these ads _________________ People watching the forthcoming beginning of the German half of the inhabitants of Berlin are no interested in co-optation |
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