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McDonald's responsible for franchisee's labor practices

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Bubba T

Member
Saw this article on another forum, thought I'd share here. Pasteurize if old.

WASHINGTON -- McDonald's, Burger King and every other company that relies on a franchise business model just suffered the legal setback they've been fearing for years.

The National Labor Relations Board ruled on Thursday that Browning Ferris Industries, a waste management company, qualifies as a "joint employer" alongside one of its subcontractors. The decision effectively loosens the standards for who can be considered a worker's boss under labor law, and its impact will be felt in any industry that relies on franchising or outsourcing work. McDonald's, for instance, could now find itself forced to sit at the bargaining table with workers employed by a franchisee managing one of its restaurants.

That's a big deal. In the case of McDonald's, roughly 90 percent of its locations are actually run by franchisees, who are typically considered the workers' employers. One of the main reasons companies choose to franchise or to outsource work to staffing agencies is to shift workplace responsibilities onto someone else. But if a fast-food brand or a hotel chain can be deemed a "joint employer" along with the smaller company, it can be dragged into labor disputes and negotiations that it conveniently wouldn't have to worry about otherwise. In theory, such a precedent could even make it easier for workers to unionize as employees under the larger parent company.

The Democratic-majority board, whose members were appointed by President Barack Obama, ruled 3-2 along partisan lines, with the two Republicans dissenting.

In their decision, the Democratic members wrote that parent companies shouldn't be absolved of their obligations to workers at the bottom of the contracting chain.

"It is not the goal of joint-employer law to guarantee the freedom of employers to insulate themselves from their legal responsibility to workers, while maintaining control of the workplace," they wrote. "Such an approach has no basis in the [National Labor Relations] Act or in federal labor policy."

Labor unions and worker advocacy groups have been hoping for just such a decision. In their view, since companies like McDonald's influence the working conditions in their franchised stores, they should be legally accountable to the workers who wear their logos, even if it's a franchisee that's technically signing the paychecks. Bringing companies at the top of the contracting chain to the table will help restore corporate responsibility in a "fissured" economy, advocates say.

The franchise lobby, meanwhile, has been warning for months that a ruling like this one would doom the business model. Franchisers argue that naming parent companies as joint employers would force them to take more control from their franchisees to contend with new liabilities. The lobby has worked hard to paint the "joint employer" standard as something that will hurt small business owners, not fast-food giants and other name brands.

The negative reactions from the business community were swift. The National Restaurant Association, a leading lobby for the industry, issued a statement Thursday saying the ruling "is overturning years of established law that has worked to help grow business and feed our economy." The Competitive Enterprise Institute, a libertarian think tank, said the ruling would have a "devastating economic impact."

The Browning Ferris case grew out of an organizing effort by the Teamsters. The union sought to have the waste management company named as a joint employer for workers employed by the staffing firm Leadpoint Business Services, a subcontractor for Browning Ferris. If Browning Ferris were deemed a joint employer, it would have to join Leadpoint in bargaining with the Teamsters. Such a determination could also make it easier for the Teamsters to organize workers at other staffing agencies that do work for Browning Ferris.

A regional director for the NLRB ruled that Browning Ferris did not exert enough control over Leadpoint workers to be considered a joint employer under current standards, but the Teamsters appealed that ruling to the federal board. Thursday's ruling will change those standards for future cases.

The decision will no doubt agitate some powerful business lobbies and Republicans on Capitol Hill. The ruling will likely spur congressional Republicans to renew their calls to defund an independent agency they view as having been too friendly to labor unions in the Obama era.

McDonald's and other franchisers have been bracing for a ruling like this for years. The board's general counsel, who functions as a kind of prosecutor, has already named McDonald's as a joint employer alongside some of its franchisees in several cases involving alleged unfair labor practices. Many observers took that move as a sign that the board would soon revise its standards for what makes a company a joint employer.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/the-federal-ruling-mcdonalds-has-dreaded-just-became-a-reality_55df39a1e4b029b3f1b1db3b

Taking more control of franchised stores means they will not attract as many franchisees, ergo more stores are corporate owned, ergo costs increase. The lobby can paint it any way they would like, but this has little to do with the little guy and more to do with their bottom line. Franchising is a significant cash resource for corporations.

This would make the proposed $15 federal minimum wage much more relevant to large corporations, and would prompt swift action to compensate for the increased costs.
 

JustenP88

I earned 100 Gamerscore™ for collecting 300 widgets and thereby created Trump's America
So does this mean I won't have to see a Subway every 1/2 mile anymore?
 
I knew when I heard this last night on Mark Levin's show (why are you listening to him?) and he was bashing it, it was more than likely a good thing.
 

Ban Puncher

Member
is it 24 hour breakfast time yet?

3878029-7922759009-pic_1.jpg
 

Gattsu25

Banned
I wonder what impact (if any) this will have on companies like Uber who crowdsource, instead of outsource, work.

Also wonder what the impact will be for companies that offshore their work through contracting other companies.
 

Bubba T

Member
So does this mean I won't have to see a Subway every 1/2 mile anymore?

I would guess that if this thing holds firm, you might see some stores close due to the added costs to Subway. It wouldn't make sense for them to keep the 3-4 Subways within a 2 mile radius open and cannibalizing each others sales. But then again, I don't think Subways are that 'expensive' to open and maintain, unlike a BK/McDonalds....
 

tbhysgb

Member
I for one don't care if it costs more for them. I won't step foot in one again after last time. They could do with reigning in some of the shitty people that run some of these franchises.
 

Novoitus

Banned
So what does this mean for the franchisee/employee relationship in regards to the franchiser? Would it be easier for people working under this franchise business model to unionize?
 

Korgill

Member
Saw this article on another forum, thought I'd share here. Pasteurize if old.



http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/the-federal-ruling-mcdonalds-has-dreaded-just-became-a-reality_55df39a1e4b029b3f1b1db3b

Taking more control of franchised stores means they will not attract as many franchisees, ergo more stores are corporate owned, ergo costs increase. The lobby can paint it any way they would like, but this has little to do with the little guy and more to do with their bottom line. Franchising is a significant cash resource for corporations.

This would make the proposed $15 federal minimum wage much more relevant to large corporations, and would prompt swift action to compensate for the increased costs.

Shouldn't costs decrease without the middleman? I always thought the franchise model only existed to minimize risk. That's why corporations are constantly buying out the franchisees' locations.
 
I just started working for the accounting department of a corporation whose entire business model is owning (non-fast food) franchises. I'm interested to see how this affects things.
 

Mr.Mike

Member
I just started working for the accounting department of a corporation whose entire business model is owning (non-fast food) franchises. I'm interested to see how this affects things.

Like, owning franchise brands or owning franchises licensed from other companies?
 

Bubba T

Member
So what does this mean for the franchisee/employee relationship in regards to the franchiser? Would it be easier for people working under this franchise business model to unionize?

It would make the franchisor equally responsible for the employees the franchisee employs. That means any employee issues, including wages and benefits can be taken up with either the franchise owner or the corporation which lends the franchise its brand. It effectively makes every employee at every franchised restaurant an employee of the corporation.

It would be easier to unionize against one common employer than against thousands of employers, which is what it currently is for most fast food restaurants. Right now, the corporation don't technically own most of their stores (they just effectively control it by most of the prices they dictate franchisees to pay), so they can legally claim they are not responsible for the employees that work for the franchise owner.

Shouldn't costs decrease without the middleman? I always thought the franchise model only existed to minimize risk. That's why corporations are constantly buying out the franchisees' locations.

Costs increase because when you own a restaurant, you assume ownership of all labor costs, supplier costs, rent, insurance, etc. When you franchise, you receive payment(s) as a percentage of gross sales for franchising your brand to an independent owner. You aren't responsible for the other costs because you do not own the restaurant.

You are right though, part of the reason franchises exist is to eliminate risk. When a city jacks up the price of property taxes where a store is located, the corporation doesn't take the hit, the franchise owner does. When a natural disaster occurs in the area and the insurance company decides to hike premiums to compensate for their losses, the corporation that lends their brand to the owner doesn't take the hit, the franchise owner does.

Since most franchise agreements are written so the fees charged are a percentage of gross sales, this minimizes these types of risks hurting the corporations cash flow and soley puts the focus on how much stores are selling.
 
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