Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m in CA. It’ll be a bonanza for our teenagers with part-time jobs! They make good money!
Wow…a Californian posting on DCUM. How’s those 14% state income taxes you voted for ?
You do realize there is an entire forum related to CA on DCUM.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems to me those businesses will just pass on those higher labor costs in the prices of their food and then the cycle begins all over again. Fast food preparation is unskilled labor.
It’s unskilled labor that’s why minimum wage will be set at $20 for California. Low enough based on the skill needed for the job, high enough for people to take and keep the jobs.
It’s been too long that fast food conglomerates have gotten away with advertised 99 cent burgers and paid workers $6 an hour. Raise the prices of the food. Plus do you really want an underpaid worker who has only been there a week and isn’t planning to stay so there’s a constant turnover of workers who have incentive to stay?
Anonymous wrote:Seems to me those businesses will just pass on those higher labor costs in the prices of their food and then the cycle begins all over again. Fast food preparation is unskilled labor.
Anonymous wrote:I’m in CA. It’ll be a bonanza for our teenagers with part-time jobs! They make good money!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m in CA. It’ll be a bonanza for our teenagers with part-time jobs! They make good money!
Wow…a Californian posting on DCUM. How’s those 14% state income taxes you voted for ?
Anonymous wrote:I’m in CA. It’ll be a bonanza for our teenagers with part-time jobs! They make good money!
Anonymous wrote:Seems to me those businesses will just pass on those higher labor costs in the prices of their food and then the cycle begins all over again. Fast food preparation is unskilled labor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems to me those businesses will just pass on those higher labor costs in the prices of their food and then the cycle begins all over again. Fast food preparation is unskilled labor.
Not a bad thing to reduce fast food consumption. And there's enough room in the labor market that relatively unskilled labor can get another job.
Then again I haven't eaten from a fast food restaurant in 30 years so my opinion doesn't really matter.
Anonymous wrote:Seems to me those businesses will just pass on those higher labor costs in the prices of their food and then the cycle begins all over again. Fast food preparation is unskilled labor.