Fast Food Strikes Hitting Fifth City: Milwaukee
http://www.thenation.com/blog/174335/fast-food-strikes-hitting-fifth-city-milwaukee?rel=facebook#
Hundreds of Milwaukee workers plan to walk off the job starting at 6:00 Central Time this morning, launching the nations fifth fast food workers strike in six weeks. Todays work stoppage follows strikes in St. Louis and Detroit last week, and in New York and Chicago last month. In each case, workers are demanding a raise to $15 per hour, and the right to form a union without intimidation.
Im so amped up and ready, Milwaukee McDonalds employee Stephanie Sanders told The Nation last night. Sanders, a 33-year-old who recently returning to working at McDonalds following a stretch in retail, said that she would be striking basically to help my generation out, and the next generation to follow. Along with low wages and the lack of job security, Sanders said she wanted to do something about punitive management: Just because you have on a blue shirt doesnt mean youre better than me.
As Ive reported, these recent work stoppages share several common characteristics: Each is a one-day strike by fast food workers, backed by a coalition of unions and community groups, targeting major companies throughout the industry and mobilizing a minority of the workforce in hopes of building broader support. While different local organizations have been involved in each citys actions, the Service Employees International Union has played a significant role in all of them.
The campaign expects todays strikes to involve workers from fast food chains including McDonalds, Burger King and Taco Bell. Like Chicagos, the Milwaukee strike involves retail as well as fast food: workers from companies including TJ Maxx, Dollar Tree and Footaction plan to strike. Both industries are increasingly prevalent inand representative ofthe US economy, and both are overwhelmingly non-union.
(More at the link.)