From child labor to $15/hour, new report reveals 100 years of Chicken Little predictions by business

The 9-hour day will hurt department stores, a 25¢ minimum wage will destroy all jobs in the south, and sick leave will cost Seattle $90 million

The Sky Remains Aloft: a century of mistaken predictions from child labor and "immoral women" to sick leave and SeaTac 

MasterPark, hiring for $15 in SeaTac

As Seattle continues to debate the $15 minimum wage, many of the far-fetched predictions, projections, and threats made by some business lobbyists sound eerily familiar.

Our new report — "The Sky Remains Aloft" — compiles a century of mistaken projections about the impact on business of improving workers living standards.

In the century since Washington State first passed a minimum wage, the real-world data has become increasingly clear: raising wages lifts workers out of poverty, creates new customers, boosts the economy, has very moderate price impacts, and does not reduce job growth. But despite the long-standing experiential evidence dating all the way back to 1915, some business lobbyists continue to tell the same scare stories the’ve been telling for the last century — even though the sky has yet to fall.

"The Sky Remains Aloft," is available online for immediate release.

Highlights include:

1903:A 9-hour day for children will hurt department stores?

The child labor measure is being vigorously attacked by the department stores to the State. Representatives of these stores are using all of their influence…to secure the defeat of this bill, on account of a provision which it contains limited the work of children from fourteen to sixteen years of age to nine hours a day. — Department store owners, opposing child labor protections. Child Labor Bill Signed. One More Remains to be Passed — Department Stores Said to be Fighting It, NY Times, April 16, 1903

1949:Any minimum wage causes “immediate unemployment”?

Any temporary advantage to our 2 million employees would be more than offset by immediate unemployment within our industry. [A] national minimum wage within our industry is impractical and dangerous. —George R. LeSauvage, National Restaurant Association, 1949

1991: Any wage above $4.25 will drive Hardee’s out of business?

I don’t know what kind of dream world they’re in. When [the cost of] your labor component goes up, it ultimately gets passed on to the consumer.  [If another wage increase were enacted], we’d probably be out of business at some point. —John Merritt, Senior Vice President, Hardee’s

2004: Raising the wage above $5.15 is a “job killer” at Domino’s?

From our  perspective, raising the minimum wage is a job killer…If the minimum wage were increased, there would be price inflation for consumers or we would likely employ fewer people. —Domino’s Pizza CEO David Brandon. Note: according to their 10-K filings, Domino’s & their franchisees currently employ 220,000 people, an increase of more than 70,000 (almost 30%) since 2004.

2011: Sick leave means “some people will go out of business”?

The hardest thing in the world is to run a small restaurant. As far as the whole labor thing goes, we’ll have to see how it plays out. But ultimately, I hate to say it, I think some people will go out of business. —Ethan Stowell on sick leave. Note: Restaurant employment in King County has increased by 3,200 jobs since sick leave was implemented.

2011: Sick leave will cost Seattle $90 million a year?

Mandatory paid sick days could cost Seattle businesses and consumers between $30 million and $90 million a year.…Mandatory paid sick leave is likely to impact small businesses, restaurants and the hospitality industry the hardest. — Washington Policy Center briefing on economic impact of Seattle paid sick leave ordinance Note: A year later, Tom Douglas, who opposed the paid sick leave law,  estimated it was only costing about one-third of what his company initially projected for the 650 eligible employees at his restaurants.

2013: "It really hurts" that $15 will force layoffs at Cedarbrook?

I am shaking here tonight because I am going to be forced to lay people off for something that is not their fault, something they have no control over,” he said. “I’m going to take away their livelihood. That hurts. It really, really hurts. —Scott Ostrander, manager of the Cedarbrook Lodge in SeaTac testifying in opposition to a $15/hour wage. Note: After $15 for hotels was implemented, he told KIRO TV that they are expanding “not in spite of Proposition 1 but actually as a recovery method to Proposition 1 to try to recoup significant expenses that will be incurred as a result of Proposition 1.”

2013: $15 + “razor-thin margins” will mean lost jobs at MasterPark? 

Roger McCracken, managing partner of MasterPark, which gave $31,890 to fight Proposition 1, has said the company may have to automate some jobs if the measure passes. “We’re on a razor-thin margin as it is,” he told Bloomberg News. —Roger McCracken, manager of Master Park. Note: After $15 for parking lots was implemented, “he called layoffs “foolish” and rejected the notion that cashiers soon would be replaced by automation”

The full report is available online for immediate release

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Contact: Sage Wilson, Working Washington: sage@workingwa.org

89% of fast food workers experience wage theft, survey shows

Underlining enforcement crisis, nationwide survey of fast food workers shows 9 in 10 experience wage theft

Wage theft is illegal in every state — but still a reality for 89% of fast food workers

A new nationwide survey by Hart Research shows that an astonishing 89% of fast food workers are victims of wage theft by their employers. Although wage theft is illegal in every state, it remains all too common: low-wage workers across the country are frequently required to work off the clock, not paid time-and-a-half after 40 hours, and simply not paid for all their hours worked.

In Seattle, the promise of our city’s criminal wage theft law has yet to see real-world application — not a single wage theft case has been prosecuted, despite the overwhelming evidence from this and other surveys that wages are stolen every day. And more than a year after paid sick leave became law, surveys show that many workers — and employers — remain unaware that Seattle workers have a right to paid sick leave.

“Passing strong laws is great, but it’s not enough,” said Yonas Kasa, who works at McDonald's on First Hill. “Workers need to know know what the law is, and we need to know that the law will be enforced. When we raise the minimum wage, we need to make sure that $15 becomes a reality for Seattle workers."

Seattle workers are calling for robust enforcement measures to be an integral part of any new minimum wage law — and in particular, to integrate a strong bottom-up education and monitoring component into the law.

“Wage theft is an epidemic in low wage jobs across the country, but we can address it if workers know their rights and aren't afraid to come forward," explained Rebecca Smith, Deputy Director of the National Employment Law Project. "As part of the minimum wage policy, the city should establish a training and monitoring program that is run through an independent worker-led organization.”

More information:

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Contact: Sage Wilson, Working Washington, sage@workingwa.org

Worker & human services groups issue joint statement backing $15 minimum wage

Seattle Human Services Coalition, Working Washington, SEIU 925, and Kids First Seattle agree: "we know that those who work in poverty-wage jobs and those who receive human services can be the very same people."

Worker & human services groups issue joint statement in support of raising wages and strengthening services

Working Washington, the Seattle Human Services Coalition, SEIU 925, and Kids First Seattle have issued a joint statement reiterating a shared commitment to reach a $15 minimum wage for SeattleThe complete statement affirms united support of a $15 minimum wage for Seattle that lifts workers out of poverty, boosts the economy, and strengthens people’s abilities to meet their basic human needs, including through a strong human services network.

"The current citywide conversation about income inequality and the minimum wage should not be used to pit one low income group against another, because we know that those who work in poverty-wage jobs and those who receive human services can be the very same people," the organizations explain. "Thousands of low-wage workers can't feed themselves without help from food banks, and can't possibly afford early childhood education for their children without public support. And at $9.32 an hour, a housing crisis is never more than a paycheck away.”

The joint statement expresses full support of the five specific actions the Seattle Human Services Coalition calls for in their report on implementing a $15 minimum wage:

  • Include non-profit human service employees in any recommended increases to the minimum wage.
  • Ensure that wage standards and city contract requirements do not lead to a reduction of needed human services.
  • Increase local investments in pay equity, including human services employees.
  • Move the discussion beyond an hourly wage to examine the broader issue of income inequality in our region.
  • Set a base wage that does not include other forms of compensation.

The complete joint statement is available online.

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Contact: - Steve Daschle, Co-Chair, Seattle Human Services Coalition: sdaschle@swyfs.org - Sage Wilson, Working Washington: sage@workingwa.org

What to expect when you're expecting a $15 minimum wage

What to expect at today's public hearing on raising wages to $15/hour

Joint public hearing of City Council and Income Inequality Advisory Committee Wednesday, March 5, 2014 Doors open at 5:00 pm, event begins at 6:00 pm

  • Beginning at 4:30 pm, low-wage workers will be available outside Town Hall as they prepare to speak out about how a raise to $15/hour would change their lives and boost the economy. While the event does not officially begin until 6:00 pm, doors open at 5:00 and we anticipate a line may form early.
  • This is the first — and perhaps the only — joint public hearing on $15 to be held by the city council & the mayor’s income inequality advisory committee.
  • Just out on Bloomberg today re: job growth & minimum wage: Highest Minimum-Wage State Washington Beats US in Job Creation
  • We don’t anticipate testimony from McDonald’s, Target, or Walgreen’s, because they make unsympathetic spokespeople — even though two-thirds of low-wage workers are employed by large corporations with more than 100 employees.
  • We do anticipate that poverty-wage workers from healthcare, retail, fast food, childcare, and other industries will share their stories about the realities of trying to support their families on low wages, and how a raise to $15/hour would change their lives.
  • 68% of Seattle voters support $15/hour, according to a recent poll by EMC Research.
  • Despite the same old sky-is-falling stories that we’ve heard in debates over paid sick, wage theft, and even the plastic bag ban, real-world studies consistently show that higher wages are good for the economy. Consumer spending data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that a worker getting a raise from $9.32/hour to $15/hour will:
    • increase spending at restaurants by 55%
    • increase spending on automobiles by 79%
    • increase spending on books by 26%
  • An hourly wage of $17.56 would be required to afford fair market rent of $913/month on a 1-bedroom apartment in the Seattle area, assuming a full-time 40-hour-a-week schedule.
  • The poorest 20% of Seattle households have income of only $13,000 a year. The top 5% average $423,000.
  • More facts & figures available online.
  • To arrange low-wage worker media availability, contact Sage Wilson, Working Washington: sage@workingwa.org.

Added bonus: $15 public hearing bingo!

Seattle workers to speak out for higher pay & a stronger economy at public hearing on $15 minimum wage

Federal data shows dramatic 55% boost to restaurant spending & similar increases in other categories as income rises from $9.32/hour to $15/hour

Healthcare workers, retail workers, fast food workers, childcare providers, and other supporters of $15 for Seattle will speak out about how a $15 minimum wage will change their lives at Wednesday’s public hearing on the minimum wage, hosted jointly by the City Council and the mayor’s income inequality advisory committee at Town Hall Seattle.

Beginning at 4:30 pm, workers and other supporters of $15 for Seattle will be outside the event preparing to give testimony about what low-wage workers will do with a $15 wage. See our fact sheet for more information on how higher wages boost spending at bookstores, restaurants, and other businesses.

Who: Poverty-wage workers and $15 for Seattle supporters

What: Speak out at the first — and maybe only — public hearing on the $15 minimum wage

When: Wednesday, March 5, 2014. Workers and supporters will be outside the event beginning at 4:30 pm. Media availability earlier in the day may be arranged: contact Sage Wilson, Working Washington, sage@workingwa.org.

Where: Town Hall Seattle, 1119 Eighth Avenue (at Seneca Street), Seattle, WA 98101. (Even though this is an official hearing it is at Town Hall, not at City Hall.

More information:

Despite the same old sky-is-falling stories that we’ve heard in debates over paid sick, wage theft, and even the plastic bag ban, real-world studies consistently show that higher wages are good for the economy. After all, more people with more money means more customers for every business out there.

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Contact: Sage Wilson, Working Washington, sage@workingwa.org.

Final details for Thursday's Boycott McPoverty boycott lines & mid-day rally

THURSDAY: “Boycott McPoverty” echoes across Seattle in support of a $15/hour wage Major boycott lines during breakfast, lunch, and dinner across the city, with presence at all 25 big burger outlets in Seattle

Beginning this morning and continuing all day, fast food workers, fast food customers, and other supporters will launch boycott lines across Seattle as part of the citywide call to Boycott McPoverty by not eating at McDonald's, Burger King, or Wendy's to show support for a $15/hour wage in fast food and for all workers.

This major citywide event also includes a lunchtime outreach effort outside all 25 McDonald’s, Burger King, and Wendy’s outlets in the city.

Hi-resolution photos and other media info on dropbox, including images of boycott signs, brown bag and banner events earlier this week, a copy of the flyer being handed out to customers, and a big burger franchise fact sheet.

Major boycott lines today with signs, banners, balloons, and other visual interest

BREAKFAST: 

7:15 am: McDonald’s – First Hill (1122 Madison St). Note: this restaurant recently won an award from McDonald’s for having the greatest amount of breakfast business in the area.

EARLY LUNCH: 

11:15 am: Wendy’s - Lake City (11744 Lake City Way NE) 11:15 am: McDonald’s - University Village (5146 25th Ave NE) 11:15 am: Burger King - Ballard (1432 NW Market St). Note: there are nearby McDonald’s and Wendy’s locations.  11:15 am: Wendy’s - Mt Baker (2543 Rainier Ave S). Note: there are nearby McDonald’s and Burger King locations.

LATE LUNCH (AND RALLY)

1:15 pm: McDonald’s - Downtown (3rd & Pine). A pro-$15, anti-McPoverty rally is planned outside the store for this time.

DINNER/DESSERT: 

5:15 pm: McDonald’s - West Seattle/Admiral (3003 California Ave SW)

Complete map of all 25 big burger outlets available online at mcpoverty.com

More information:

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Contact: Sage Wilson, Working Washington: sage@workingwa.org

Call to Boycott McPoverty & support a $15/hour wage to echo all day Thursday at big burger outlets across Seattle

Fast food workers and supporters to have presence at every big burger outlet in the city, with major lines at busiest locations

With substantial boycott lines in multiple locations throughout the day and a presence outside every big burger outletduring the lunch rush, fast food workers, fast food customers, and other $15 for Seattle supporters will make sure the whole city hears to call to Boycott McPoverty and support Thursday’s one-day boycott of poverty wages at McDonald’s, Burger King, and Wendy’s.

Bositerous boycott lines will be mounted outside numerous restaurants from end to end of the city during their busiest times (listed below). There will also be a boycott presence at all 25 big burger chain outlets across the city during the lunch rush.

BREAKFAST: 7:15 am: McDonald’s – First Hill (1122 Madison St). Note: this restaurant recently won an award from McDonald’s for having the greatest amount of breakfast business in the area.

EARLY LUNCH: 11:15 am: Wendy’s - Lake City (11744 Lake City Way NE) 11:15 am: McDonald’s - University Village (5146 25th Ave NE) 11:15 am: Burger King - Ballard (1432 NW Market St) 11:15 am: Wendy’s - Mt Baker (2543 Rainier Ave S)

LATE LUNCH: 1:15 pm: McDonald's - Downtown (3rd & Pine)

DINNER: 5:15 pm: McDonald's - West Seattle/Admiral District (3003 California Ave SW)

More information:

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Contact: Sage Wilson, Working Washington: sage@workingwa.org

Grassroots outreach accelerates in advance of Thursday’s “Boycott McPoverty” event

25-foot-long banner over I-5 during rush hour, leafletting outside stores, and more

With 25-foot-long banners over I-5, thousands of flyers, person-to-person outreach at fast food restaurants and more, the call to Boycott McPoverty continues to sweep through Seattle today.

Today’s grassroots effort comes a day after fast food workers and supporters handed out brown “Boycott McPoverty” lunch bags at Westlake Park, reaching huge numbers of downtown workers & shoppers with the call to join Thursday’s citywide big burger boycott & support the $15 movement by not eating at McDonald’s, Burger King, or Wendy’s that day.

Who: Fast food workers and other supporters of $15 for Seattle

What: Banner, leaflet, poster, and reach out to fast food customers to support Thursday’s citywide Boycott McPovertyeffort

When & Where: Tuesday, February 18, 2014 at multiple locations. - 7:30am - 8:30am: Giant 25-foot-long banner on Madison St overpass over northbound I–5 traffic, and Olive Way overpass over southbound I–5 traffic. - ongoing throughout the day: leafleting & postering in multiple neighborhoods outside various fast food restaurants. - 5:00pm - 6:00 pm: Banners displayed in various locations across the city. Specific locations to be announced during the day. (Contact sage@workingwa.org, follow #mcpoverty on twitter or check our map for updates on specific leafleting, postering, and bannering events as the day goes on.)

Fast food workers have called for a one-day boycott of all 25 McDonald’s, Burger King, and Wendy’s locations within Seattle city limits as a show of support for raising pay to $15 an hour.

The three big burger chains make billions of dollars by serving billions of burgers to billions of customers – but they still pay their workers poverty wages. Higher wages would mean workers could afford to support themselves and pay for basics like food, rent, and transportation. Our economy would benefit too — because more people making more money means more customers for every business out there.

Leafletting, bannering, and other outreach will continue throughout the week, leading up to Thursday’s boycott at all 25 big burger chain locations in the city.

More information:

  • Higher-income people actually eat fast food more often that poor people — 51% of people with incomes above $75,000 report they eat fast food weekly, compared to only 39% of people with incomes below $20,000. (A full-time worker paid the Washington State minimum wage would have an income of $19,385/year.)
  • Organizations endorsing the call to Boycott McPoverty include Working Washington, Fifteen Now, Good Jobs Seattle, Martin Luther King County Labor Council, OneAmerica, People’s Institute NW, SEIU 775NW, SEIU 1199NW, Teamsters 117, Tyree Scott Freedom School, and Washington CAN.

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Contact: Sage Wilson, sage@workingwa.org

Fast food workers to hand out thousands of “Boycott McPoverty” lunch bags at Westlake

Spreading the word about citywide big burger boycott as $15 movement continues to build momentum

Seattle fast food workers will be at Westlake Park at lunch break Monday, handing out thousands of brown “Boycott McPoverty” lunch bags and asking downtown workers & shoppers to join a citywide big burger boycott on Thursday by not eating at McDonald’s, Burger King, or Wendy’s.

The one-day citywide boycott is the next step in the campaign to win $15 for Seattle — an effort which has the support of 68% of likely voters in the city, according to a recent poll by EMC Research.

Who: Fast food workers and other supporters of $15 for Seattle

What: Hand out thousands of brown “Boycott McPoverty” lunch bags, asking downtown workers & shoppers to join the call for a one-day boycott of all 25 McDonald’s, Burger King, and Wendy’s in the city.

When: Monday, February 17, 2014, 11 am - 1 pm: lunchtime

Where: Westlake Park: Corner of 4th & Pine in downtown Seattle

Fast food workers have called for a one-day boycott of all 25 McDonald’s, Burger King, and Wendy’s locations within Seattle city limits as a show of support for raising pay to $15 an hour. More information about the big burger boycott set for Thursday at McPoverty.com

The three big burger chains make billions of dollars by serving billions of burgers to billions of customers – but they still pay their workers poverty wages. Higher wages would mean workers could afford to support themselves and pay for basics like food, rent, and transportation. Our economy would benefit too — because more people making more money means more customers for every business out there.

Leafletting, bannering, and other outreach will continue throughout the week, leading up to Thursday’s boycott at all 25 big burger chain locations in the city.

More information:

  • Higher-income people actually eat fast food more often that poor people — 51% of people with incomes above $75,000 report they eat fast food weekly, compared to only 39% of people with incomes below $20,000. (A full-time worker paid the Washington State minimum wage would have an income of $19,385/year.)
  • Organizations endorsing the call to Boycott McPoverty include Working Washington, Fifteen Now, Good Jobs Seattle, Martin Luther King County Labor Council, OneAmerica, People’s Institute NW, SEIU 775NW, SEIU 1199NW, Teamsters 117, Tyree Scott Freedom School, and Washington CAN.

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Contact: Sage Wilson: sage@workingwa.org, 206-227-6014

$15 minimum wage for Seattle wins backing of 68% of likely voters, new poll shows

Overwhelming support for $15 across every city council district

A new poll conducted by EMC Research finds a remarkable 68% citywide level of support for a $15 minimum wage among likely Seattle voters. Support is incredibly robust across every City Council district — and in several areas, fully 3 in 4 likely voters support for $15 for Seattle. (Specific highlights available online; EMC Research has also made their full polling memo publicly available.)

These remarkable results come little more than a week before "Boycott McPoverty," the February 20th one-day citywide boycott of the big burger chains (McDonald's, Burger King, Wendy's) called by Seattle fast food workers. Boycott McPoverty will mark another step forward as momentum continues to build to lift workers out of poverty and boost the economy with $15 for Seattle.

Who: Seattle fast-food workers and other supporters of $15 for Seattle What: Call on the city to "Boycott McPoverty" in a one-day citywide boycott of the big burger chains (McDonald's, Burger King, Wendy's) that will build on the overwhelming support for $15 across the city. When: Thursday, February 20, 2014, breakfast, lunch and dinner. Where: Boycott lines outside multiple stores will be scheduled throughout the day at multiple locations across the city. Details available next week.

In less than 9 months, the Seattle fast food strikes have given birth to a wildly popular movement to boost the economy by ensuring workers are paid enough to support themselves. Back on May 30th, the day of the first strikes, the call for $15 was treated as a quixotic aspiration destined for failure. But after months of action by low-wage workers, voters in SeaTac and Seattle moved the issue dramatically forward on Election Day. Now, as Mayor Murray's task force discusses the best way to implement a $15 minimum wage, an overwhelming consensus has coalesced in support of the call for $15 initially raised in the fast food strikes.

Highlights of the EMC Research Poll:

  • 68% of likely Seattle voters support a $15 minimum wage vs. just 25% who oppose
  • Support is strong in every council district:
    • District 1 (West Seattle): 58% - 37%
    • District 2 (South Seattle): 74% - 17%
    • District 3 (Capitol Hill): 71% - 20%
    • District 4 (U District/Wallingford/Ravenna): 76% - 14%
    • District 5 (Northgate/North Seattle): 75% - 23%
    • District 6 (Ballard/Greenwood): 68% - 25%
    • District 7 (Queen Anne/Downtown): 60% - 32%
  • Strong enforcement rules (including fines) win 86% support
  • Three in four voters agree that "If workers in Seattle earn higher wages, our entire community benefits."
  • 71% agree that "A higher minimum wage helps local businesses because more workers making more money means they will have more money to spend."

About the poll:

  • The poll was conducted by EMC Research, a leading public opinion & market research firm, through a January 14 - 22 telephone survey of 805 likely November 2014 voters in Seattle, with a margin of error of 3.5%.
  • Polling was funded by a coalition of organizations & individuals supporting $15 for Seattle, including Working Washington, UFCW 21, Nick Hanauer, SEIU 1199NW, the Teamsters, and the MLK County Labor Council.

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Contact: Sage Wilson, Working Washington, sage@workingwa.org