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California Fast-Food Labor Dispute Settled, Most Workers Will Get $20 An Hour

LOS ANGELES, CA - JULY 24: Signs for Taco Bell, Grinder, McDonalds, Panda Express fast-food restaurant line the streets in the Figueroa Corridor area of South Los Angeles on July 24, 2008, Los Angeles, California. The Los Angeles City Council committee has unanimously approved year-long moratorium on new fast-food restaurants in a 32-square-mile area, mostly in South Los Angeles, pending approval by the full council and the signature of Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa to make it the law. South LA has the highest concentration of fast-food restaurants of the city, about 400, and only a few grocery stores. L.A. Councilwoman Jan Perry proposed the measure to try to reduce health problems associated with a diet high in fast-food, like obesity and diabetes, which plague many of the half-million people living there. (Photo by David McNew/Getty Images)
  • Most fast food workers in California will get a $20 minimum wage next year under a deal announced Monday between labor unions and the industry.
  • The deal will avoid a costly referendum on the matter on the November 2024 ballot.
  • The mandatory raise, nearly $5 an hour more — would apply to all fast food restaurants in the state that are part of a chain with at least 60 locations nationwide.
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