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Smalls had planned on working Thursday, but her colleagues convinced
her otherwise. “‘You’re either with us, or you’re for Wendy’s,’” Smalls
remembers her co-workers telling her. Her mother also weighed in
Thursday morning as Smalls was heading to work at the franchise in
downtown Brooklyn. “She said, ‘If one person stands up, nothing happens.
You have to stand together.’”
So Tina Smalls joined approximately 400 other fast food workers
across New York City in Thursday’s day-long strike — the latest action
in the ongoing campaign that is demanding a raise of $15 an hour and
attempting to form a cross-franchise union. Twice as many workers
participated in Thursday’s walkout than in the previous strike, which
launched the union campaign in November.
The ongoing effort has highlighted the highly exploitative conditions
faced by those at the deep fryers and cash registers of America’s most
profitable fast food outlets, which include Burger King, McDonald’s,
Dominos, Pizza Hut and KFC. The actions and considerable media attention
has also begun to chip away at the conventional image of a fast-food
worker as someone who bears her servitude with a youthful grin.
While it’s true that some workers arrive fresh from high school, the average age of these employees is 28.
Many are middle-aged or even elderly. The majority are immigrants. And
all face the reality of working, often for years, at a salary that is at
or just above the legally allowed minimum of $7.25.
State lawmakers in Albany recently agreed
to raise New York’s minimum to $9 an hour. But the change will take
three years to come into effect, and workers Thursday said $9 an hour
isn’t much better than what they earn now. “It’s not easy to join
something like this,” said Smalls. “But it’s for a change. We want $15
and a union. We want to be paid so that we can live better.”
Plans for the cross-franchise union campaign were first initiated
about a year ago by the advocacy group New York Communities for Change.
The Service Employees International Union has provided financial
sponsorship and legal aid, while faith groups have lent moral
encouragement. The first walkout occurred on November 29, which was then
the largest protest action of fast-food workers in the industry’s
history. Throughout the winter, organizers super-sized their efforts.
New York Communities for Change hired a slew of new organizers,
including veterans of the Occupy Movement, to reach out to additional
fast-food employees. The group began a petition, which garnered 110,000 signatures even before the second action.
Yet, the decision over whether or not to take part in Thursday’s action, which was timed to commemorate the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.,
has rested on the shoulders of the workers themselves. As a result, the
cornerstone of the organizing strategy has been debates and secret
meetings, which have been taking place inside the city’s fast food
joints for months. Citywide meetings between workers from various
franchises have bolstered the shop-by-shop gatherings.
As managers began to sense that something was occurring, they
interrogated workers individually, which is illegal, and fired those
whom they identified as strike leaders, which is also illegal. Managers
have also held mandatory meetings aimed at convincing their employees
not to join the campaign. One organizer with New York Communities for
Change, who asked to remain anonymous since he was not authorized to
speak to the press, explained how the intimidation works. “The boss
calls in everybody that works for him and takes about an hour to talk
about how bad the union is and how they’re going to take your money,”
she said.
She explained that one deterrent strategy is to claim that the only
reason organizers are attempting to unionize the fast-food industry is
because unions are desperate for members. Union density has declined,
she concedes, but she has a counter-argument that she uses when speaking
to workers: “You know what else has gone down throughout the last few
decades? Wages. Wages have gone down. Your purchasing power has gone
down. Your standard of living has gone down. It’s all correlated with
the decline of unions.”
Two economic revolutions of the 1970s — automation and globalization —
have also contributed to the downward spiral of wages over the last few
decades. Automation has meant that fewer hands are needed for
industrialized labor, while advances in transportation technology
exported jobs overseas. Both pushed more and more people into the
service industry. Meanwhile, radical organizers were systematically
rooted out of unions during the Cold War under the guise of fighting the
internal threat of communism. Left in charge were those who preferred
to operate unions with a top-down business-friendly model, a shift in
the labor movement that also hampered the expansion of worker power.
Today, as the economic recession continues, employers have a surplus
of low-wage labor and only flashes of organizing to oppose the resulting
exploitation — a dynamic that is leading to a surge in corporate
profits even as wages decline. This disparity is particularly pronounced
in the fast-food industry. In the most extreme example, net profits for
McDonald’s totaled $5.5 billion
last year, while the company’s rank-and-file report being forced to
picket for a raise above minimum wage. As America gradually becomes a
low-wage nation, fast-food workers on the picket lines in New York are
in the vanguard of a struggle to preserve the interests of working
people against corporate profits.
Yet, despite this obvious inequality, the campaign to organize these
workers has a long journey ahead. Although hundreds joined Thursday’s
strike, there are tens of thousands of fast-food workers in the city.
One challenge has been working in an industry with no history of
unionization.
“There isn’t a culture around here of a union, of sticking together,”
said the organizer with New York Communities for Change, adding that
divisions between black, brown and white workers have been an additional
impediment. “I wouldn’t say there have been conflicts, but there has
been tension,” she said. “My job is to get people that before did not
talk to each other to build bridges.”
A
week before Thursday’s strike, organizers and fast-food workers
listened to Baxter Leach, who marched with Dr. Reverend Martin Luther
King in Memphis, Tennessee, during the successful 1968 sanitation
workers strike. Leach said that the challenges workers he met in
New York described to him brought back memories of what he and his
comrades endured before they won union recognition.
“$7.50 an hour, that ain’t no money, “ Leach said, who explained that
the daily challenges voiced to him by New York City fast-food workers
brought back memories of what he and his colleagues experienced as
sanitation workers before they won union recognition. “They ain’t got no
insurance. No kind of benefits. They get sick, they get hurt on the
job, they can’t go to a doctor. They can’t pay for food. That ain’t
living. They’re fighting the same fight for justice we were.”
As with the job of sanitation workers, the task of serving junk food
isn’t considered a prestigious position in our society. But those on the
picket-lines Thursday in New York hope that the courage and dignity
with which they’ve imbued their struggle will inspire more of their
fellow workers to join them and push Reverend King’s dream of equality
closer to reality.
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