The War on Fast-Food Joints
Cities around the country are contemplating bans on drive-thrus and other new regulations.

From the perennial fights over Chick-fil-A to claims that fast food disproportionately hurts low-income and minority communities via poor nutrition, it's easy to see how fast food entered political debate. But far from being limited to culture war clashes, the business model of the industry itself is increasingly under attack.
The battlefront starts with so-called "joint employer" or "joint liability" standards, which the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) is expected to officially impose soon. This would essentially require franchisee employees to be counted as employees of the franchisor parent corporation by holding the franchisor liable for the actions of its individual franchisees. It also would make it easier for unions to organize at the parent company level, rather than via individual franchise outlets. Progressives have been pushing for years to impose joint employer standards onto the franchise model, and the Biden administration is echoing the Obama administration in following through (after a brief hiatus during Donald Trump's presidency).
The NLRB's rules on joint employers tend to flip-flop every four to eight years depending on who controls the White House, so it's little surprise that the Biden administration is poised to reopen this debate. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is also currently contemplating getting involved in the debate. But beyond administrative dictates that can be tweaked by phone and pen, Democratic lawmakers have also tucked joint employer standards into the notorious Protecting the Right to Organize (PRO) Act floating around Capitol Hill, which includes a laundry list of legislative priorities for organized labor.
Left-leaning policy makers are not stopping at the federal level, either, as states like California are also considering joint liability bills. Last year, when California passed its controversial FAST Recovery Act, which not only raised minimum wages for restaurant workers to $22 an hour but also created a 10-member Fast Food Council to oversee and regulate the entire industry, the legislation also included new joint liability rules.
The joint liability language was removed from the bill before it passed, but once the franchise and restaurant industry fought back by getting a referendum for the FAST Act to qualify for the 2024 ballot, liberal state lawmakers suddenly reintroduced a stand-alone joint liability bill. The joint liability idea is already spreading beyond the Golden State—ironically known as the birthplace of fast food—to states such as New York.
Attacking the franchise model makes little sense for those interested in helping more Americans climb the income ladder. Being the proprietor of a franchise has long been seen as one of the preeminent—and most readily accessible—ways to achieve the American dream. Franchise ownership often requires lower startup capital compared to other types of businesses and provides training in the requisite expertise and knowledge needed to operate the business.
As a result, the franchise model is recognized as providing more opportunities for those in underrepresented communities. This is reflected in the ownership numbers, as 30 percent of franchises are minority-owner compared to only 18 percent of other types of businesses. Some have even called the franchise system "the safety net of the economy," since a recently laid-off worker in an unrelated sector can turn around and buy a franchise and receive the guidance needed to succeed.
According to the International Franchise Association, the Obama-era version of the joint employer standard cost franchises over $33 billion annually and resulted in 376,000 lost job opportunities. Perhaps most alarmingly, it led to an over 90 percent increase in litigation against franchises.
The corporate legal structure of fast food is not the only aspect of the industry facing threats. The iconic drive-thru window itself is under assault, as cities and municipalities across the country are contemplating—or have already passed—drive-thru bans. Pushed under the guise of "smart urban planning" and walkable communities, proponents argue that drive-thrus create traffic congestion and discourage walking.
But once again, these bans mostly serve to hurt businesses and workers. On average, drive-thru sales comprise between 50 percent to 70 percent of sales for fast-food outlets—and unsurprisingly were an even more vital lifeline during the pandemic. Further, drive-thru windows can be a way to protect worker safety, particularly in late-night settings where keeping employees behind the barrier of a drive-thru window may create less risk than keeping the dining room open.
Many restaurants also continue to face significant labor shortages—with 62 percent of operators reporting they lack the requisite number of employees to meet demand—and drive-thru-only restaurants require less labor than on-premise dining. In addition, surveys indicate consumers prefer carry-out rather than dine-in at quick service restaurants, so these eateries are simply responding to consumer preference.
It's no secret that the modern left is waging a clandestine "war on restaurants," and the fast-food franchise industry appears to be ground zero for the attack. The proprietors of these small businesses and their customers stand to lose if policy makers undermine the franchisee-franchisor model and ban drive-thrus.
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Many restaurants also continue to face significant labor shortages—with 62 percent of operators reporting they lack the requisite number of employees to meet demand…
If only there was a supply of unskilled workers ready and willing to work for peanuts….
We need more slaves!
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He didn’t call it “wage slavery” though.
Calling them slaves is slightly hyperbolic, but importing millions of low-skill, low wage workers (through our current system) does create an underclass of people that have no way towards upward mobility.
Work permits would be great, I just don’t think there are as many jobs as there are people to fill them (strictly talking about immigrants of any variety). Of course, if we didn’t have ridiculous regulations and wage laws, American citizens would be able to compete with any immigrant on those fronts.
I don’t know about where you live, but I see help wanted signs everywhere. I see businesses limiting hours and service because they can’t find enough help. So from what I see there are more jobs than there are people willing to work.
You do know there are things called labor statistics right? But sure. Call up abbot to send your town 100k illegal immigrants.
DFW has an unemployment rate of like 4%, so that could of course be a factor.
I am not nearly so pessimistic about American workers not being willing to do any job, though I’d agree that many expect way more in wages than their skill levels would justify.
My meaning was more that even if you take national unemployment at 10% of the population, so 35MM, I think some order of magnitude more than that would try to flock here if we had fully open borders.
I consider labor participation rate a better measure than unemployment because it counts people who have given up or otherwise don’t want to work.
It’s government trying to make everyone “wage slaves” anyway. At least it looks like the direction of most employment policies is to push everyone into corporate employment by making it more and more difficult to start or survive as a small, independent business. Get rid of any kind of work permit, minimum wage, business licensing and interference with at-will employment and citizens and immigrants will all have a lot more opportunity to get ahead. Especially if you kill the welfare state too.
Already have them. They are called teenagers dumdum. Likewise those already on welfare. Let’s just exacerbate the problem!
I do like how your empathy for illegal immigrants is to give them the worst jobs possible. Oh you love an underclass if it makes your buying a few cents cheaper. LOL.
I’d enjoy watching Mike Rowe punch you in the face.
They are called teenagers dumdum. Likewise those already on welfare.
I said “willing.”
And continue to ignore welfare that allows people to be unwilling. Instead import others to fluff up those who choose welfare over work. Keep the steal going buddy.
Minimum wage and work restrictions for minors are real problems. It’s amazing how unprepared for work a lot of young people are.
Minimum wage and work restrictions for minors are real problems.
I say that too, but then I look at my step-niece. She just quit the job she had at a deli for the last two or three years so she could focus on academics her last year of high school. Managed to buy a used car and put money in the bank. So where there’s a will there’s a way.
It’s not impossible. I also know some good kids who can and do work.
Which is why I said “willing” in my original post. I think sheer laziness is more of a barrier than permits or minimum wage when it comes to kids getting jobs.
I also think it’s somewhat ironic that many illegals skip the line because they can immediately find labor jobs for cash, while the ones who follow the rules are forced into unemployment for years.
I couldn’t do it. Wait years to work that is. Skills are perishable and technology moves. Being forced out of the workforce for years while you wait for government permission can be hard to recover from.
I don’t see why immigrants should be barred from
workingcontributing to the economy. It’s just stupid.And many go explicitly to the cities and states that give them benefits. Why ignore those.
Again, first step in your wishes is ending welfare. But you want to skip that step.
My first step is helping people help themselves.
Of course they’re going to seek places that give them benefits. IT’S ILLEGAL FOR THEM TO FUCKING WORK!
That’s why I say let them work. Then address welfare.
Why do you want to take away benefits while prohibiting them from working? How do you expect them to take care of themselves and their families? I would think you’d want them to support themselves with a job. Unless you want them to have neither and be force to starve, go back to where they came from, or become criminals. That seems kind of cruel. Well shit, I just answered my own question.
I agree. Employment should be a completely private arrangement. And employers shouldn’t be conscripted into enforcing immigration laws.
Wait. You just claimed teenagers were unwilling in order to simp for an illegal underclass.
You left out retirees.
I’m old, 52, and I worked at Burger King, Sears, and Kmart. It was never supposed to be a career. Just something you did as a teenage to learn and make money.
You do realize they already work there. But hey, slave class right?
Bring on the robos. They will only mess the order up once in a while.
Bring on the robos! Human capital is the most finite resource in the economy. Show me a robot and I’ll show you human hands that are freed to do something else.
What do all of the politicians and activists pushing these policies in these specific locales have in common?
Economic retardedness?
narcissistic personality disorder
Nobody needs 23 different kinds of fast food joints.
Nobody besides elites needs 23 meals per week. Or month.
… 30 percent of franchises are minority-owner compared to only 18 percent of other types of businesses.
Can’t have all those uppity dingers, right pluggo?
What makes you see the attack on the fast food business model as separate from the culture war aspects? These are fronts in the same fight.
This is basically a covert attack on the right to be a fat fuck.
Or to be able to quickly get some food when you are on the road.
Luckily with the transition to EV you’ll have a few hours to get some better food.
Progressives, aka socialists, will not stop until we all work for the state, live in community housing, and take the bus for approved travel to the communal farms and factories.
ps. Can you guess what government “fast food” will look like?
Soylent Green?
McDonald’s without the fries?
You think it’s hard to get a shake now from McDs but wait till the government comes into help. “we need to do a 5 yr study on this machine, make sure it’s favor neutral, and is magically good for the environment”
Like Michelle Obama school lunches, probably.
cold, dried out, and maggot covered.
“It also would make it easier for unions to organize at the parent company level, rather than via individual franchise outlets.”
The only thing you need to know about this. Unions own the Biden Administration. Prove me wrong.
Like anyone would buy a union franchise.
I’m surprised that the Biden administration has not stepped in during the Yellow trucking bankruptcy and forgiven the $760 million virus loan to save the jobs of 20,000 Teamster Union members by forgiving the loan
Well again this is all within the normal parameters that Reason campaigned for and now they’re bitching about it. So tedious.
Factio Neofeudalisma Delenda Est!
I’ll give you my whopper when you pry it from my cold, dead hands.
> it’s easy to see how fast food entered political debate.
Yea, because EVERYTHING must be politicized these days.
Sorry, you wrote an article?
The articles here keep acknowledging how much better Trump’s presidency was (but only in parentheses). And yet he was so bad for the country because of stances regarding immigration that produced policy differences insignificantly different from those of the administrations that were supposedly so much better on the matter.
Don’t forget how drive-thrus substitute for paving over more ground for parking.
Well, who will need a drive through when we all have to spend a couple of hours charging our cars?
May as well go inside and sit down and munch your bug-burger and cauliflower fries while sipping government approved vitamin water.