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California fast food workers could get collective bargaining, better workplace standards under new legislation

Image of group of fast-food workers
Ariana Drehsler | CalMatters
Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzalez, D-San Diego, Yusef Miller with the Racial Justice Coalition and Karina Narinan, a Burger King employee, pose for a photo along with others at a strike for better working conditions and to demand passage of AB 257 at Burger King in San Diego on Nov. 9, 2021.

California鈥檚 fast food workers could get the power to collectively bargain under a bill moving through the state legislature, a measure that could drastically change the fast food and franchising industries.

would create a Fast Food Sector Council to set minimum workplace wages, hours and standards. The 11-member council would be made up of state, business and labor representatives and housed in the Department of Industrial Relations.

The bill is backed by labor groups and opposed by restaurant and business interests.

For the more than half-million fast food workers in California like Crystal Orozco, the bill would bring peace of mind that someone is fighting for their interests.

At her last job at a Jack in the Box in Folsom, Orozco said she was never afforded breaks during her graveyard shifts, since she was one of only two employees staffing the store overnight.

鈥淣ot once did I get a 30-minute or ten-minute break,鈥 she said in an interview. 鈥淚鈥檝e seen them straight up not pay people for hours they鈥檇 worked.鈥

The Carmichael resident led two strikes at the restaurant over its COVID-19 safety protocols and a broken air conditioner. She said managers threatened to call immigration authorities on a coworker who was also pushing for better working conditions.

鈥淭hey want people to be blind to these laws just to make that quick buck,鈥 Orozco said. 鈥淭hey can get their bonuses and we鈥檙e the ones breaking our backs for them.鈥

Most fast food restaurants are franchised, meaning locations are owned and operated by independent business owners, not the actual corporations whose names they carry.

Business owners sign a contract and pay certain fees to the national brand. In exchange, they get the benefit of selling well-known products 鈥 like Big Macs 鈥 and national marketing from their franchisor.

But in the debate over AB257, many franchise owners bristle at being lumped in with giant corporations and the perception that they are the ones squeezing workers while pocketing billions in revenue.

Restaurant and business groups oppose the bill, arguing it would add another layer of costs and regulation to an industry where profit margins are often razor-thin.

Leena Mann owns and operates two Sacramento-area Subways and a Del Taco with her husband and brother-in-law.

鈥淲e鈥檙e not Del Taco,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e own that flag to operate that business, but it is us behind it as small business owners that operate these businesses.鈥

Mann said hourly wages have increased significantly since they opened their first restaurant in 2016, when the minimum wage was $10 per hour. The family worries AB257 would add another layer of bureaucracy and make doing business even more difficult.

鈥淚f employees have any issues, they have current resources like Cal-OSHA, the Department of Industrial Relations, they also have a Labor Task Force for any issues. We are already in compliance with these agencies,鈥 she said.

AB257 includes language that would make franchise owners and the companies they franchise from jointly liable for labor violations.

The bill鈥檚 author, Democratic Assembly Member Chris Holden, acknowledged during a committee hearing earlier this summer that many franchise owners treat their workers well.

鈥淭hose who aren鈥檛 doing the right thing aren鈥檛 going to tell their employees how to hold them accountable,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why this bill is here.鈥

Another responsibility of the council would be to promote industry standards 鈥 or do more to make workers aware of their rights.

Holden, himself a former franchisee, says the bill would also allow business owners to file actions against agreements with companies that prevent them from meeting minimum standards for their employees.

The measure faces a key vote in the Senate Appropriations Committee on Thursday.

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