Last September, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed California Assembly Bill 1287 into law, which includes a $20 per hour minimum wage for fast-food workers and a fast-food regulatory council which has the authority to raise the industry’s minimum wage annually. But between last fall and January, California fast-food restaurants cut about 9,500 jobs, representing a 1.3 percent change from September 2023.
@icedquinn @wintermute_oregon @realcaseyrollins oh yeah well, it isn’t a viable solution. A lot of places here have closed, even in Oakland, for crime related reasons on top of increasing wages. Fast food workers here get capped for nothing.