McDonlads Archives - Page 15 of 17 - I Hate Working In Retail

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Man gets two DWIs at the same McDonald’s location in one day.


Oneonta, New York

In the early morning hours of March 10, 2014, 31-year-old Zachary Boynton decided to hit up McDonald’s for a late night meal. Unfortunately, he was also drunk.

Now as everyone knows, going through the drive thru at the Golden Arches while intoxicated can often result in two very unfortunate outcomes:

1. Ordering a Filet-O-Fish

2. Ramming into another vehicle.

While no information exists about what Zachary ordered, he did manage to slam into the back of the car in front of him. The police were called, Zachary got a ticket, and he was turned over to some sober friends….who apparently didn’t realize that driving under the influence wasn’t a new thing for their fast food craving companion.

At 5:16 AM that same morning, the same McDonald’s called police to report that a drunk driver hadslammed into the side of their building. Sure enough, it was Zachary behind the wheel again (and apparently unaware that the lobby didn’t open until 6:00 AM.

The police did what they should have done the first time with a repeat offender (he’d just been busted a few months ago for the same offense) and arrested him at his home later that day.

Zachary Boyton was charged with a second DWI and is currently awaiting trial

Original post from Ramblingbeechchat.com

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Workers sue McDonald’s for systematic theft of wages

 

US workers accused fast-food giant McDonald’s Thursday of systematically stealing wages through illicit practices like shaved hours and unpaid overtime.

Seven class-action lawsuits were filed Wednesday and Thursday in California, Michigan and New York demanding that McDonald’s pay back the stolen wages and end the practices that violate state and federal laws, workers and their lawyers said.

McDonald’s Corporation is named in all seven lawsuits, while franchisees were included in five of them.

The lawsuits argue that McDonald’s, which took in nearly $5.6 billion in profits last year, regularly fails to compensate its already low-paid workers for all the hours they work.

It allegedly forced employees to work off the clock, failed to pay them overtime, shaved hours off time cards, and deprived employees of timely meal and rest breaks, among other practices.

“We’ve uncovered several unlawful schemes, but they all share a common purpose — to drive labor costs down by stealing wages from McDonald’s workers,” Michael Rubin of Altshuler Berzon, who filed the California suits, said in a statement.

“These suits have been filed to stop this widespread employee pay theft,” Joseph Sellers, of Cohen Milstein Sellers & Toll, co-counsel in the lawsuits filed in California and New York, said in a conference call announcing the legal action.

Sellers said the suits in three states cover more than 30,000 McDonald’s workers. “There may be more suits coming,” he said.

McDonald’s spokeswoman Gidi Sa Shekhem said the company was currently reviewing the allegations in the lawsuits.

“McDonald’s and our independent franchisees are committed to undertaking a comprehensive investigation of the allegations and will take any necessary actions as they apply to our respective organizations,” she said in an email to AFP .

Shares in Dow member McDonald’s slid 1.4 percent to $97.30 in afternoon trade in New York.

Copyright (2014) AFP. All rights reserved

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McDonald’s Admits It May Lose The Fight To Keep Wages Low

McDonald’s is joining the rest of us in worrying about income inequality, but not because it thinks low-wage workers don’t make enough — instead, it worries it might have to pay its own workers more.
 

A groundswell of public concern about income inequality could hurt the fast-food giant’s profit margins, McDonald’s warned its latest annual filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
 

The “long-term trend toward higher wages and social expenses in both mature and developing markets, which may intensify with increasing public focus on matters of income inequality,” is one of the “risk factors” facing McDonald’s in 2014, according to the filing.
 

McDonald’s spokeswoman Heidi Barker wrote in an email to The Huffington Post that the statement was part of routine disclosures McDonald’s is required to make to shareholders “regarding possible circumstances or events – whether in or out of our control- which may impact our future business performance.”
 

McDonald’s has been a high-profile target of recent protests aimed at pushing the fast-food industry to pay workers more. In demonstrations outside McDonald’s and other fast-food chains, protesters demanded a wage of $15 an hour, arguing the companies could afford to pay more, given their billions in profits and cushy CEO salaries.
 

Though McDonald’s might disagree, narrowing the gap between its rank-and-file workers and its top dogs could actually benefit the company, by helping the economy overall and putting more money in the pockets of people most likely to spend it.
 

Income inequality is a “root cause” of the financial crisis and slow recovery, according to a new study from Columbia Management, a money-management firm. That’s because wealthier households are more likely to save the money they earn, while middle- and low-income households tend to spend their money almost immediately. Raising the pay of workers at places like McDonald’s and Walmart — even at the expense of shareholders and wealthy executives — would give those workers more money to spend at places like McDonald’s and Walmart.
 

McDonald’s CEO Don Thompson claimed last year that the company has always been “an above minimum wage employer.” Indeed, the median wage for fast-food workers is about$8.90 an hour — a full dollar more than the federal minimum wage of $7.25. But that’s still not enough to afford basic necessities in most places.
 

An online budgeting tool for employees provided by McDonald’s essentially admitted as much, encouraging workers to get a second job in order to make $24,500 a year. The fast food giant’s “McResource Line” came under fire after an employee recorded a conversation with a McResource representative encouraging her to apply for food stamps. McDonald’s ultimately took the site down after it ignited controversy.
 

Meanwhile, James Skinner, the CEO Thompson replaced, took home $8.75 million in the last year of his McDonald’s career. That’s about 580 times the income of a full-time worker paid the minimum wage, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The pay gap between a McDonald’s CEO and a McDonald’s worker has doubled in the past 10 years, Bloomberg found.
 

This post has been updated to include comment from McDonald’s.

Source. Huffingtonpost.com

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