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Message   Digimaus    All   The California Left   December 27, 2023
 1:48 PM *  

California is going to destroy itself and as a native Californian
myself, I hope to hell it does.  It saddens me greatly to see crap like
this coming from my home state.

(Though calling pizza delivery a career isn't a smart choice...)

===
From: http://tinyurl.com/4vt63av6


Pizza Hut franchisees lay off more than 1,200 delivery drivers in California as
                   restaurants brace for $20 fast-food wages

   Nancy Luna
   2023-12-22T15:23:41Z

     * In April, California fast-food workers are set to get a nearly 30% pay
       bump to $20 an hour.
     * Fast-food chains such as Chipotle say they'll raise prices to offset
       the state's higher labor costs.
     * Two Pizza Hut franchisees are laying off more than 1,200 delivery
       drivers in California.

   Two Pizza Hut operators in California are eliminating their in-house
   delivery services at hundreds of stores, resulting in more than 1,200
   driver layoffs, according to federal-employment notices reviewed by
   Business Insider.

   The layoffs, effective throughout February, affect Pizza Hut delivery
   drivers across California, including at Sacramento, Palm Springs, and Los
   Angeles locations. The Pizza Hut franchisees are reducing staff as
   fast-food chains in the state brace for a new law that increases worker
   pay to $20 an hour in April.

   "PacPizza, LLC, operating as Pizza Hut, has made a business decision to
   eliminate first-party delivery services and, as a result, the elimination
   of all delivery driver positions," a federal WARN Act notice filed by the
   fast-food operator with the state's Employment Development Department
   said.

   The Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act requires employers
   to give notice of plant closures or mass layoffs.

   Other PacPizza affiliates filing notices included Southern PacPizza LLC,
   CalPac Pizza LLC, and Pac Partners LLC.

   A second Pizza Hut franchisee, Southern California Pizza Co., and its
   affiliates are also discontinuing its in-house delivery services and
   laying off about 841 drivers, according to a WARN Act notice from December
   1.

   The company operates dozens of stores in Orange, Los Angeles, Riverside,
   Ventura, and San Bernardino counties.

   A driver who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation told
   BI that he was offered $400 severance pay if he stuck around through his
   February 5 layoff date.

   He's been a driver for nine years.

   "The money they are giving us as severance pay is a slap on the face," he
   said. "It comes to $3 a month for nine-plus years of service."

   Gene Erdman, the chief people officer at American West Restaurant Group,
   did not respond to a request for comment. The franchise also operates
   under the names SoCal South OC LLC and SoCal Pizza Holdings LLC.

   Lisa Hough, the director of human resources for PacPizza in San Ramon,
   California, was listed as the contact on all five WARN Act notices that
   the company's president, Brian E. Thompson, signed. Hough and Thompson did
   not respond to a request for comment.

   Customers will have to rely on third-party delivery apps to get Pizza Hut
   delivered from these locations. Most Pizza Hut restaurants in the state
   work with third-party delivery apps, such as DoorDash, Uber Eats, and
   GrubHub.

   It's unclear whether other Pizza Hut franchisees plan to scrap in-house
   delivery in California.

   Pizza Hut, owned by the Taco Bell parent company Yum! Brands, said the
   company was "aware of the recent changes to delivery services at certain
   franchise restaurants in California."

   "Our franchisees independently own and operate their restaurants in
   accordance with local market dynamics and comply with all federal, state,
   and local regulations while continuing to provide quality service and food
   to our customers via carryout and delivery," Pizza Hut told BI.

   Mark Kalinowski, a restaurant-industry analyst, wrote in a note this week
   that he expected "more harm to come" in various ways as fast-food chains
   "take action in an attempt to blunt the impact of higher labor costs."

   Chains such as Chipotle and McDonald's said they planned to pass the costs
   of higher wages in California to customers by raising menu prices.

   In 2022, Gov. Gavin Newsom of California signed the FAST Act into law. It
   called for the minimum wage for fast-food workers to increase to $22 an
   hour in 2023. But corporate chains such as McDonald's, Chipotle,
   Chick-fil-A, and franchise-advocacy groups fought the law. A coalition of
   restaurant-industry organizations said the law could raise costs for
   fast-food restaurants by $3 billion. They rallied to get a referendum on
   the ballot.

   A new law, AB 1228, replaced the controversial FAST Act this year. The
   minimum-wage increase for fast-food workers was changed to $20 an hour.
   The new law was viewed as a compromise between the labor unions
   representing fast-food workers and the restaurant industry.

   The law affects 557,000 fast-food workers at 30,000 restaurants in
   California.
===

-- Sean

 
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