Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
California’s New Fast Food Rules and Pay Headed to the Ballot
By admin
Published 2 years ago on
September 13, 2022

Share

 

It’s becoming a trend.

The California Legislature, at times dominated by progressive Democrats, and Gov. Gavin Newsom enact legislation that targets specific industries and the industries respond with ballot measures to overturn or modify what the politicians have wrought.

Dan Walters

CalMatters

Opinion

It happened twice in 2020.

Legislation was passed in 2018 to eliminate cash bail for criminal defendants. The bail bond industry immediately launched a referendum campaign to put the issue to voters, but it could not go onto the ballot until 2020.

Advocates of the no-bail legislation raised and spent more than $15 million on the campaign, a third of it coming from one man, billionaire businessman and philanthropist John Arnold. It condemned bail as biased against poor and non-white defendants.

The bail bond industry and its insurers countered with a $10 million-plus campaign, arguing that eliminating bail would put more criminals on the street, and scored a win when voters, by a hefty margin, rejected the legislation.

In 2018, the state Supreme Court imposed strict limits on classifying workers as independent contractors, rather than payroll employees, giving unions a huge win. The Legislature took up the issue in 2019, haggling for months over which industries would be exempted from the Supreme Court’s standards. Most notably, legislators refused to exempt drivers for delivery and ride-share companies such as Uber and Lyft.

In response, those and other similar companies qualified a 2020 ballot measure to carve out an exemption for themselves and spent a record $204 million on a successful campaign to pass it, more than 10 times what unions spent to oppose it.

We’re about to see a third ballot clash over progressive legislation and it could be even more expensive.

Newsom Signed Labor’s Highest Priority Bill

On Labor Day, Newsom signed California labor unions’ highest priority bill, creating a 10-member Fast Food Council to regulate working conditions in fast food outlets and raise workers’ wages to as high as $22 an hour with cost-of-living adjustments thereafter. Newsom said it “empowers our workers.”

A day after Newsom signed the legislation, Assembly Bill 257, a coalition called Protect Neighborhood Restaurants filed paperwork with the attorney general’s office to place a referendum on the ballot that, if successful, would overturn the law.

Two Washington-based groups, the International Franchise Association and the National Restaurant Association, co-chair the coalition. “It is only right for California’s voters to have a voice before harboring the burden of a bill that has widely been heralded as a massive step in the wrong direction,” the coalition said in a statement.

The battle could begin with a legal clash over the measure’s title that will be written by the attorney general’s office because Democratic attorneys general tend to slant ballot titles in favor of proposals from unions and other Democrat-friendly groups and negatively toward those from business and/or conservative sponsors.

Dec. 4 Deadline for 2024 Ballot

Whatever the title, proponents will have until Dec. 4 to submit 623,000 signatures of registered voters on petitions and thus place their referendum on the 2024 ballot – a tight time frame but doable if they are willing to spend a few million dollars on professional signature-gathering.

If the measure qualifies, AB 257’s provisions would be suspended until voters determine its fate.

Sponsors will contend that the law undermines local business owners and will ultimately lead to much-higher fast food prices for consumers. Opponents will say that the law protects low-income workers from exploitation.

The stakes are high. If the law survives the industry challenge, it could have far-reaching effects on other franchised industries by establishing a new assumption that franchises are merely outlets for their parent companies, not stand-alone businesses.

About the Author

Dan Walters has been a journalist for nearly 60 years, spending all but a few of those years working for California newspapers. He began his professional career in 1960, at age 16, at the Humboldt Times. For more columns by Walters, go to calmatters.org/commentary.

Make Your Voice Heard

GV Wire encourages vigorous debate from people and organizations on local, state, and national issues. Submit your op-ed to rreed@gvwire.com for consideration. 

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

Pro-Palestinian Activists Removed From Michigan’s Student Government

DON'T MISS

Bill Bergey, Pro Bowl Linebacker for Eagles and Bengals, Dies at 79

DON'T MISS

Mahomes Throws 3 TDs as Chiefs Clinch AFC Top Seed by Breezing Past Steelers

DON'T MISS

Jackson Breaks NFL QB Rushing Record in Ravens’ Romp Over Texans

DON'T MISS

Beyoncé’s Performance Highlighted Netflix’s NFL Debut on Christmas Day

DON'T MISS

James Scores 31 in Record 19th Christmas Day Game as Lakers Hold Off Curry, Warriors

DON'T MISS

Why Are So Many Christians So Cruel?

DON'T MISS

California Bans Schools From Forcing Teachers to ‘Out’ LGBTQ Students

DON'T MISS

Livingston Mayor Jose Moran on Winning His Race by Nine Votes and Plans for the City

DON'T MISS

Welding is a Way Back to School for California Kids Who Regularly Ditch Classes

UP NEXT

Mahomes Throws 3 TDs as Chiefs Clinch AFC Top Seed by Breezing Past Steelers

UP NEXT

Jackson Breaks NFL QB Rushing Record in Ravens’ Romp Over Texans

UP NEXT

Beyoncé’s Performance Highlighted Netflix’s NFL Debut on Christmas Day

UP NEXT

James Scores 31 in Record 19th Christmas Day Game as Lakers Hold Off Curry, Warriors

UP NEXT

Why Are So Many Christians So Cruel?

UP NEXT

California Bans Schools From Forcing Teachers to ‘Out’ LGBTQ Students

UP NEXT

Livingston Mayor Jose Moran on Winning His Race by Nine Votes and Plans for the City

UP NEXT

Welding is a Way Back to School for California Kids Who Regularly Ditch Classes

UP NEXT

This Kitty Wants to Be Your Christmas Angel

UP NEXT

Religion Has Been in Decline. This Christmas Seems Different.

Jackson Breaks NFL QB Rushing Record in Ravens’ Romp Over Texans

57 minutes ago

Beyoncé’s Performance Highlighted Netflix’s NFL Debut on Christmas Day

59 minutes ago

James Scores 31 in Record 19th Christmas Day Game as Lakers Hold Off Curry, Warriors

2 hours ago

Why Are So Many Christians So Cruel?

3 hours ago

California Bans Schools From Forcing Teachers to ‘Out’ LGBTQ Students

4 hours ago

Livingston Mayor Jose Moran on Winning His Race by Nine Votes and Plans for the City

5 hours ago

Welding is a Way Back to School for California Kids Who Regularly Ditch Classes

5 hours ago

This Kitty Wants to Be Your Christmas Angel

6 hours ago

Religion Has Been in Decline. This Christmas Seems Different.

23 hours ago

California Limits Junk Fees: New Law Blocks Fines for Declined ATM Withdrawals

1 day ago

Pro-Palestinian Activists Removed From Michigan’s Student Government

Alifa Chowdhury’s successful campaign to lead the University of Michigan’s student government promised just one thing: to block financing fo...

39 minutes ago

39 minutes ago

Pro-Palestinian Activists Removed From Michigan’s Student Government

44 minutes ago

Bill Bergey, Pro Bowl Linebacker for Eagles and Bengals, Dies at 79

50 minutes ago

Mahomes Throws 3 TDs as Chiefs Clinch AFC Top Seed by Breezing Past Steelers

57 minutes ago

Jackson Breaks NFL QB Rushing Record in Ravens’ Romp Over Texans

59 minutes ago

Beyoncé’s Performance Highlighted Netflix’s NFL Debut on Christmas Day

2 hours ago

James Scores 31 in Record 19th Christmas Day Game as Lakers Hold Off Curry, Warriors

3 hours ago

Why Are So Many Christians So Cruel?

4 hours ago

California Bans Schools From Forcing Teachers to ‘Out’ LGBTQ Students

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend