END TIME NEWS, A CALL FOR REPENTANCE, YESHUA THE ONLY WAY TO HEAVEN


Join the forum, it's quick and easy

END TIME NEWS, A CALL FOR REPENTANCE, YESHUA THE ONLY WAY TO HEAVEN
END TIME NEWS, A CALL FOR REPENTANCE, YESHUA THE ONLY WAY TO HEAVEN
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.
TODAY IS
Latest topics
» PLEASE ACCESS THE LINK TO ALL INFORMATION
MCDONALD'S WORKER SAYS SHE CAN'T AFFORD TO EAT AT MCDONALS'S EmptySun 29 Aug 2021, 22:15 by Jude

THE OLIVE BRANCH | GOD IS MY SALVATION
LIVE TRAFFIC FEED

WEATHER FORECAST
ScreenSaver Forecast by NWS
WEATHER FORECAST
ScreenSaver Forecast by yr.no

MCDONALD'S WORKER SAYS SHE CAN'T AFFORD TO EAT AT MCDONALS'S

Go down

MCDONALD'S WORKER SAYS SHE CAN'T AFFORD TO EAT AT MCDONALS'S Empty MCDONALD'S WORKER SAYS SHE CAN'T AFFORD TO EAT AT MCDONALS'S

Post  Guest Fri 29 Nov 2013, 10:49

McDonald's Worker Says She Can't Afford to Eat at McDonald's

By Susan Berfield November 27, 2013

A McDonald' s Corp. restaurant in Oak Brook, Illinois, on July 12

Photograph by Tim Boyle/Bloomberg

A McDonald' s Corp. restaurant in Oak Brook, Illinois, on July 12

(Updated at 1 p.m. to add comment from McDonald’s)

For a piece on the potential economic and social consequences of raising the federal minimum wage in the latest issue of Bloomberg Businessweek, I interviewed several low-wage workers about how they manage. As we’ve learned from recent studies, they often rely on public assistance; sometimes they turn to their extended family and friends or charity. One told me she donates plasma when she needs a little cash; a second sleeps in her car. One, Shawndraka Mack, works full-time at McDonald’s (MCD), but noted she can’t afford to eat there.

Mack, who is 40, has been working in the fast food business for 18 years. For the past six, she’s been at a McDonald’s in South Carolina, working 40 hours a week and making $7.60 an hour. “I love what I do, but I don’t want to work for nothing. I want to work for something,” she says.
Story: A Help-Line Voice Saying What McDonald's Won't: Fast-Food Workers Need Aid

Mack is raising two teenagers with her fiancé. They live in a mobile home she inherited from her mother on Edisto Island, part of the Gullah community of the Lowcountry and an hour’s drive from the McDonald’s in Charleston. Her fiancé is on disability, and the $600 he receives every month goes toward insurance for her 1990 Honda (HMC) Accord, the phone bill, and some spending money for the kids. Her salary covers gas for her commute, electricity, and everything else the family needs. The kids are on Medicaid.

The family gets $345 a month in food stamps. Mack says she goes to the grocery store once a month, and whatever she buys has to last until the next trip. She brings her lunch to work every day. “I work at McDonald’s and I can’t afford to eat there. It’s crazy.”

It’s not clear who owns the store at which Mack works. According to the McDonald’s website, employees are entitled to free or discounted food. In the U.S. almost 90 percent of McDonald’s 14,100 or so restaurants are owned by franchisees, who can determine whether or not to offer a discount, according to a McDonald’s spokesperson. Mack says her restaurant doesn’t offer any discount.
Story: In McDonald's Breakfast War With Coffee Chains, a New Front: Supermarket Shelves

McDonald’s often notes that its franchisees are independent. Last month, after a study calculated that fast food workers (at all chains) rely on about $7 billion worth of public assistance a year, a McDonald’s spokeswoman wrote to me: “McDonald’s and our independent franchisees provide jobs in every state to hundreds of thousands of people across the country. As with most small businesses, wages are based on local wage laws and are competitive to similar jobs in that market.”

A few weeks ago, Mack joined the effort to raise fast-food workers’ wages to at least $15 an hour. “That would do me just fine,” she says. “I expect to stay at McDonald’s. I just want to get paid more for what I know and what I do. I want to make sure my kids have a better life than I do.”
Susan-berfield-photo-200x200
Berfield writes about retailers, restaurants, and other consumer companies for Bloomberg Businessweek. Follow her on Twitter @susanberfield.

Guest
Guest


Back to top Go down

Back to top

- Similar topics

 
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum