top
East Bay
East Bay
Indybay
Indybay
Indybay
Regions
Indybay Regions North Coast Central Valley North Bay East Bay South Bay San Francisco Peninsula Santa Cruz IMC - Independent Media Center for the Monterey Bay Area North Coast Central Valley North Bay East Bay South Bay San Francisco Peninsula Santa Cruz IMC - Independent Media Center for the Monterey Bay Area California United States International Americas Haiti Iraq Palestine Afghanistan
Topics
Newswire
Features
From the Open-Publishing Calendar
From the Open-Publishing Newswire
Indybay Feature

May Day: The Fight for $15 Comes to Oakland

by JP Massar
On May Day, the fight for a $15 'Livable Wage' is coming to Oakland.
fightfor15-oak-nyc-chi_laborsolidarity73.jpg

New York City led the way with two walkouts by low wage workers in the fast-food industry, the first in November, 2012, and the second on Aprith 4th, 2013, the 45th anniversary of the death of Martin Luther King.

In November, about 200 New York fast-food workers at 30 stores went on strike for a $15 hourly wage...

((Weeks ago)) about 400 workers walked out. "And we believe they'll be even more emboldened after this one," said ((Communities for Change director)) Westin. "The more they continue to show that they have power in their stores, the more they'll continue to be involved."

Next up was Chicago on April 24th, 2013.
Hundreds of fast food and retail employees in Chicago began a mass walkout Wednesday morning, calling for the city’s minimum wage to be raised to $15 an hour...

...the protest, organized by the Workers Organizing Committee of Chicago (WOCC), included employees from national store chains ranging from McDonald’s to Sears to Victoria’s Secret, most of whom currently make $8.25 an hour, a wage that WOCC members said forces workers to use social service programs like RentAid to make ends meet.

photo fightfor15_zps3b1f7f00.jpg

Now it's Oakland's turn. Organized by the Livable Wage Assembly, an outgrowth of Occupy Oakland's Labor Solidarity Committee (the group which organized the December 12th, 2011 shutdown of the Port of Oakland), their first volley is to be a rally at Oscar Grant Plaza and noise demonstration through the streets of Oakland at 5:00 PM on May 1st, 2013 to raise awareness.

Organizers hope to enable the struggle of low-wage workers to challenge their bosses for a livable wage...

The noise demo will focus on companies like McDonalds, Walgreens, Rite-Aid, Taco Bell and a host of other chains in the downtown area.

The City of Oakland's minimum wage is $8.00/hr, the same as California's, while other Bay Area cities, notably, San Jose and San Francisco, have significantly higher minimums ($10/hr or more). Oakland is willing to demand that businesses which have contracts with the Port and City of Oakland pay a 'living wage' of $13.45 an hour (nonwithstanding this edict being violated flagrantly by some contractors, especially at the Oakland Airport, administered by the Port of Oakland) but no effort has been made by Oakland's elite to raise the minimum for the rest of Oakland's low wage workers.

No one can live on $8/hr in Oakland. Oakland is experiencing a rapid increase in real estate prices and rental costs, and paying for housing alone will consume almost all of that wage. Forget about food, transport, utiities, and the possibility that you might get sick.

photo Fight15sq1-150x150_zps590e0318.jpg

The minimum wage in Australia is (with some significant exceptions) $16.46/hr (that's at current conversion rates. It's $15.96 Australian dollars/hr). That includes a health care system available to everyone, payed for almost completely by tax revenues. Their economy is doing just fine; better than ours.

There is no sane reason (greed is neither sane nor rational) the United States could not pay a livable wage to every worker. The Fight For $15 is a first step in making that happen.

Here comes Oakland. Look out world.


Fight for 15 Chicago.

Fight for 15 twitter.

Fight for 15 Oakland twitter.

Join the May Day Fight in Oakland.

Photo Source: NYC - Chicago - Oakland Photo (photographer not named)


Add Your Comments

Comments (Hide Comments)
by miles
Bigger Cages, Longer Chains!
by Oaktown Otto
Is this a Yes Men prank?

$15 an hour in the U.S. is straight-up poverty wages. In the Bay Area it's sub-poverty wages. Might as well ask for $20 million for OPD too.

What a stupid joke!
by Real World
So $15 an hr is ''sub poverty ''wage and therefore shouldn't be fought for ? Well Otto the wildly cheering workers at Burger KIng tonight probably would disagree ! Or the several Starbucks workers who i gave leaflets to who said '' Hell Yes It''s about time !! ''
But what do they know right Otto ?
PS How much do you make an hr ?
by O-town Otto
I make $16 an hour and over 60% of my income goes to rent. Food prices keep climbing and I'm ALWAYS broke.

So I'm supposed to get all hot and bothered over chump change? I'm supposed to pretend that the unlivable wage of $15 is something I should fight for?

Is that because it's one of those Trotskyite "transitional" demands that you don't really expect to get anyway, but put out rhetorically to recruit more doormats to come to meetings, then to get them to go out and sell more newspapers and recruit more doormats to meetings?

5 years ago, some think tank published a report that the average worker in the U.S. made $15 an hour. How pathetic to demand the average! But you're really just asking that amount because that's what you party has had as it's platform since 1974, right?

by Konsider
It's very important to hold corporations accountable for the misery they're imposing, and that's what this rally was about, and that's a good thing. I make minimum wage, and it would be great if it were raised to $15 an hour. However, that corporations make record profits year after year is sickening, and I totally agree they should be wiped out altogether. I think that sentiment was shared by more than half of the participants at the May day rally in downtown Oakland. In San Francisco they had an anti-capitalist march, which would have made more sense for the demonstrators in the east bay to have done as well.
We are 100% volunteer and depend on your participation to sustain our efforts!

Donate

$75.00 donated
in the past month

Get Involved

If you'd like to help with maintaining or developing the website, contact us.

Publish

Publish your stories and upcoming events on Indybay.

IMC Network