At Thursday's annual meeting, McDonald's CEO Don Thompson touched ever-so-briefly on the issue, even as 800 protesters outside marched to cement their $15-per-hour wage demand in the minds of investors in attendance. On Wednesday, an estimated 1,500 protesters gathered on the company campus, and 139 were arrested for intentionally crossing a police barricade.
"We respect the fact that they want to challenge us relative to wages," Thompson told some 350 shareholders at the unexpectedly high-profile meeting. "We pay fair and competitive wages and we provide opportunity, and we provide job opportunities and training for those entering the workforce."
For McDonald's, the current strategy is clear: publicly position the company as a great first employer for young workers. Even as it avoids specifically addressing the minimum wage issue, it is eager to portray McDonald's as a great job and job-experience enabler for young folks in an uncertain economy.
"McDonald's is often a first job for many entering the workforce," Thompson said. "About one-third of our employees are 16 to 19." Thompson also noted that 60% are age 24 or under — and 70% are part time. "We are proud that we open doors to opportunity."
But protesters said they were angered by the remarks, and some felt insulted.
"This isn't a starter job, and I'm not a teenager," said Ashona Osborne, 22, a mother and a McDonald's worker in Pittsburgh who makes $7.25 per hour. "This is my career, and I'm struggling to raise a family and provide for my son. That's not possible on $7.25. McDonald's needs to realize that the workforce has changed."
"I've been working for McDonald's for 10 years, and my hourly paycheck is the same now as it was my first day on the job: $7.35," said Cherri Delisline, a mother of four from Charlest! on, S.C. "McDonald's can keep on saying that we are teenagers, but saying it over and over again doesn't make it true."
The median age of fast-food workers, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, is 29 for all workers and 32 for women. About 70% of all workers are age 20 or older, the bureau reports.
Thompson also boasted about McDonald's hiring 50,000 armed forces veterans last year and said the company has committed to hire another 50,000 this year. That, he said, is "the most of anyone in the industry."
During the question-and-answer session, Thompson ticked off a list of about a half-dozen top corporate executives at McDonald's who began their careers as restaurant "crew members" as the workers are known, including Tim Fenton, the chief operating officer; and Jeff Stratton, who is president of McDonald's USA.
Also during the Q&A, Ricardo Caceres, 42, who came to the U.S. from El Salvador in 1993, lauded McDonald's for the opportunity it has given him. "I owe my success to McDonald's," said Caceres, who was brought to the meeting by McDonald's.
In a phone interview, he says, he started as a crew member and got promotions, even as McDonald's paid "many thousands" of his college costs. After working as director of operations for a McDonald's franchisee in the Los Angeles area, he's now preparing to buy his own franchise.
"I've saved money over the years while working for McDonald's, as I've been promoted to better and better positions," he says.
His starting wage: $4.25 an hour. At the time, he says, he was as a student in his early 20s and living with family.
Asked if he could now support his own family on the current minimum wage of $7.25 an hour, he hesitates, then says: "It would not be easy. But it has to be done, if that's the current situation you're in. And if you work hard, $7.25 is just a starting point."
It doesn't have to be that way, says Harry Moorhouse, owner of two fast-food restaurants in Detroit. He was not at! the meet! ing, but feels strongly that restaurant owners can afford to pay higher wages.
Moorhouse told USA TODAY that for the past year or so he has paid his 14 full-time employees $15 an hour at his Moo Cluck Moo restaurants in the Detroit area. His employees also get one week of paid vacation after the first year — and five paid sick days.
"We're making enough money," says Moorhouse. "It's the right thing to do."
Moorhouse says he started out paying $12 an hour and after a few months upped it to $15. He says his business can afford these wages, in part, because the turnover is so low. He says he has more than 400 résumés from folks wanting to work for him, "and I get lots and lots of calls."
He notes that one of his employees just bought her first house. "It's not much," he says, "but $15 is a livable wage."
In Moorhouse's favor vs. McDonald's, however, his businesses have been able to charge a buck or two more for his all-natural food than McDonald's. A burger, fries and a soft drink at his restaurants fetches about $7 or $7.50, he says. And his independent small business doesn't have to pay a big franchise fee to McDonald's or any other chain. Also, he says that his remodeling and start-up costs per store have been less than $100,000, rather than the $1.5 million to $2 million it might cost to build a new McDonald's store.
Back at the annual meeting, Thompson might have thought he had a rare moment to relax during the Q&A when Bob Liking, a middle school student from St. Charles, Ill., approached the microphone.
Liking said that he planned to do precisely as Thompson suggested, and start with an entry-level job at McDonald's some day after he reaches the legal working age of 16.
He said that he hoped to work his way up the fast-food giant's executive ranks. Then, he surprised Thompson by proclaiming, "Some day, I'd like to be considered for your job."
Without missing a beat, Thompson responded, "Bob, there are some days I'm ready to give it to! you."
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