A group of Los Angeles fast food workers walked off the job Tuesday to urge city officials to approve a law that would give them more control over their work schedules.
Fast food workers have long complained of unstable schedules that make it difficult to plan their finances, child care, medical appointments and other obligations.
Los Angeles City Councilmember Hugo Soto-Martinez introduced an ordinance last year that aims to give these workers more stability and consistency in scheduling, but the council has yet to vote on the measure.
The proposal would expand the reach of the city’s existing Fair Work Week law — which requires that employers give retail workers their schedules in advance — to include some 2,500 large chain fast food restaurants that employ roughly 50,000 workers.
More than 60 fast food workers rallied outside City Hall at around 11 a.m. Tuesday sporting purple union T-shirts and carrying “on strike” signs printed in Spanish and English.
The rally was planned by California’s statewide union of fast food workers, which formed last year. The California Fast Food Workers Union is affiliated with the Service Employees International Union, which for years has helped to organize fast food employee walkouts over wage theft, safety and pay.
Lizzet Aguilar, 44, a cashier at a McDonald’s in the downtown L.A. area, said she was scheduled for a three-hour shift Tuesday that she skipped to join the rally.
Aguilar said she was scheduled to work only two days this...
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