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No matter how small the haul is, a thief is a thief, right? If a poverty-wage fast-food worker sneaks out a couple of burgers to take home to the kids, the bosses yell: “Thief!”
But what do you call it when the bosses steal from those same workers? How about outrageous, disgusting – or simply unbelievable? Well, believe it or not, it’s happening every day in multiple ways, and not by a few bad apples, but in what has become routine corporate practice by McDonald’s, Burger King, Domino’s, and other hugely-profitable giants.
Technically it’s called “wage theft,” and it involves such slick-fingered moves as erasing hours from employee time cards, requiring off-the-clock work, not paying for overtime hours, refusing to reimburse workers for gas they bought while making deliveries, or inventing uniform fees and other deductions that illegally drop pay below the minimum wage. Come on – isn’t it shameful enough that these global behemoths pay rock-bottom wages, without them circling back like low-life pickpockets to steal from their own employees? This is not just corporate thievery, it’s thuggery.
How low can fast-food greed go? So low that the top bosses at headquarters play a sleazy game of Hide & Seek, pretending that they have nothing to do with this rip off. Personnel practices, they airily claim, are left to local franchisees, who are “independent business owners.” Bovine excrement! Corporate central dictates how much mustard each franchise can put on a bun, so to think that it doesn’t monitor every dime in payroll is a ludicrous lie.
In a recent survey of fast-food workers, nine out of ten said they have had wages stolen by their bosses. This thievery has become business as usual, and it’s worse than shameful – it’s slimy.
For more information, go to the National Employment Law Project: www.nelp.org.
A bold shift in America’s minimum wage debate
At last, our political leaders in Washington are taking action for low-wage workers and the middle class, striking a bold blow for America’s historic value of economic fairness.
Gosh, I hope you don’t think I meant Washington, DC! No, no – the same old corporate mentality of stripping any semblance of ethics from the work ethic still rules in that plutocratic roost. Rather than DC, it’s Washington State I’m talking about, specifically the progressive forces of Seattle who’ve just produced a landmark $15-an-hour minimum wage. Instead of just talking about the widening gap of inequality and wishing Congress might give a damn about the millions of Americans being knocked down, the people of Seattle are providing national leadership.
“We did it – workers did this,” said Kshama Sawant. A member of Occupy Seattle, she has been the tenacious, articulate leader of a large grassroots coalition of low-wage workers called “15 Now,” and she was elected to the City Council last year by building the case for the $15 wage floor. In addition, Mayor Ed Murray campaigned last year for raising the minimum to $15 – indexed to inflation – and this year he pulled together a 24-member working group of labor and business interests, which has spent four months hammering out details of the local ordinance. On June 2, all nine city council members voted to adopt it.
Of course, the forces of corporate greed never sleep, and a Washington, DC, group called the International Franchise Association is unleashing a pack of lawyers to sue the city, hoping a federal judge will nullify the will of local voters. So the political fight isn’t over, but the good people of Seattle have done all of us a big favor by moving the wage debate from the miserly, self-centered turf of the corporate bottom line to the moral high ground of social justice, where it belongs. Seattle is just the start of this movement.
“Seattle Approves $15 Minimum Wage, Setting a New Standard for Big Cities,” The New York Times, June 3, 2014.
“Seattle Announces $15 Minimum Wage, Highest In The U.S.” www.thinkprogress.org, May 1, 2014.
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