California keeps looking for ways to raise prices, drive away more businesses and destroy growth through bad policy and bad politics
On January 25, 2023, McDonald's President Joe Erlinger criticized California's FAST Act (AB257), claiming it hinders small businesses and threatens job growth. The law, pushed by organized labor, establishes an unelected council to oversee labor decisions in the fast-food industry. Experts from California's Department of Finance and the Department of Industrial Relations dispute its effectiveness, citing a possible 20% increase in fast-food prices and low instances of wage theft in the sector. A California judge has paused enforcement until a ballot measure on November 5, 2024, allowing voters to decide the bill's fate.
- None.
- AB257 could potentially raise fast-food prices by 20%, burdening consumers.
- Law undermines local businesses and creates competitive disadvantages with exemptions.
- Increased enforcement costs estimated at $12 million, with no clear benefit for workers.
- Organized labor's influence raises concerns about political motivations over effective policy.
Last fall, the legislature passed a bill – AB257, or the FAST Act – almost entirely at the behest of organized labor's firm grip on many of the state's lawmakers. It makes it all but impossible to run small business restaurants, but the impacts are far beyond that. Under the FAST Act, an unelected council of political insiders, not local business owners and their teams, would make big decisions about crucial elements of running a business, fracturing the economy in the process.
As the head of
Proponents argued that this bill was about helping everyone — especially hardworking people employed by restaurants. But the facts simply don't support it.
No evidence exists to conclude that the FAST Act will better serve workers' needs. That's not just my opinion but also the conclusion from the state's own experts.
Three of the foremost and most credible media outlets in the country – The Wall Street Journal,
Economists estimated AB257 would drive up the price of eating at a quick service restaurant in
Even more perplexing are final-hour exemptions that reek of backroom, special-interest negotiations in
So how did it get this far?
After years of work, and hundreds of millions of dollars, organized labor has failed to meaningfully grow its base of dues-paying members in new industries. Take, for example, that in 2022, the unionization rate in the
Simply put, organized labor hasn't been successful going through the front door – giving everyday workers the ability to choose whether they want a union. So it asked for a backdoor – pushing
The foremost leader of organized labor said legislation like AB257 "is how we are going to win the union part of our journey.6" By effectively creating a union bargaining table inside the government, taxpayers will foot the bill for organized labor's membership campaign.
More than 1 million Californians took notice and said they wanted this bill's fate to be decided at the ballot before bearing its burden, using
But
As a 20-year member of a company that operates in many different political environments around the country and around the world, this looks much more like autocracy than democracy.
A judge in
Let me be clear: we support legislation that leads to meaningful improvements in our communities, including responsible increases to the minimum wage. Our business does well when our employees and our communities do well.
We welcome and support legislation that creates an even playing field and applies to all industries and all workers. We support legislation that has clear, meaningful, positive and transparent outcomes for the broader community and our restaurant teams. We applaud legislation that supports small business owners and the franchised business model – and does not impede our ability to engage with and meet the needs of employees and aligns with our values.
There are big, important issues that need the attention of lawmakers: inflation and rising costs, a deficit10 in the
The state is teaching us a powerful lesson about what our future could look like if this one-sided style of democracy is mimicked elsewhere, or goes unchecked in the Golden State. And this threat is real – just last week, a
Fortunately,
Joe Erlinger President, McDonald's USA
1
2
3WSJ:
4UC Riverside: How Increases In Worker Compensation Could Affect Limited-Service Restaurant Prices
5
6
7
8
9State of California Budget Change Proposal
10The Bond Buyer: Facing a deficit,
11HB 2478:
View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/california-keeps-looking-for-ways-to-raise-prices-drive-away-more-businesses-and-destroy-growth-through-bad-policy-and-bad-politics-301731002.html
SOURCE
FAQ
What is the FAST Act (AB257) in California?
How does McDonald's view the FAST Act?
What did California's Department of Finance say about AB257?
When will California voters decide the fate of AB257?