New Labor Rules Will Screw Over Your Local McDonalds
A new joint employer rule from the NLRB threatens to fundamentally change the business relationship between a franchise and its parent company.

In modern America, it's often in the dusty halls of little-known bureaucratic agencies that some of the most economy-defining events take place. The most recent example is the National Labor Relations Board's newly issued "joint employer" rule, which debuted last month to relatively little mainstream media attention. The rule is just the latest in the progressive left's effort to bludgeon the country into a one-size-fits-all economic vision.
The NLRB's new rule changes the definition of what constitutes a "joint employer," which may sound like some arcane definitional technicality that only labor lawyers need to worry about. But in reality, it is a revision that will upend the business models of entire American industries. The rule specifies that a joint employer relationship will be found any time two entities share or co-determine the terms and conditions of employment.
All that's needed for this finding is for an entity to possess indirect control—even if it does not exercise that control—over workplace issues such as wages, scheduling, or health and safety rules. In layman's terms: A parent corporation like McDonald's could be deemed a joint employer with one of its franchisee outlets for something theoretically as small as creating rules for how to keep employees safe when operating the nugget fryer. The NLRB rationale for this change is that the prior Trump era rule allowed parent companies to unfairly avoid negotiating with workers and assuming liability for labor law violations.
The franchise model exists because it helps scale a business drastically beyond what a single centralized company could operate by itself. Deeming parent corporations joint employers would therefore undercut the entire rationale behind the franchise system if employees at thousands of outlets are suddenly deemed employees of the parent. This would make the parent company liable for potential labor law violations at discrete franchise stores, even though the real cause could simply be a poorly run outlet. It also empowers unions by giving them a foothold to collectively bargain directly with the parent corporation rather than having to organize at the individual franchisee level.
According to the International Franchise Association, an Obama-era iteration of the joint employer rule—which the new rule largely presages a return to—led to a 93 percent increase in litigation and over 376,000 lost jobs. The franchisor-franchisee business model is one of the most important in America. In addition to the countless fast food and fast-casual chains dotting cityscapes across the country, hotels, auto repair shops, and retail stores are also industries that commonly operate under the franchise model.
Franchise ownership is one of the most common ways to achieve the American dream given that owning a franchise usually requires lower startup capital and creates an affiliation with an established brand that has ready-to-go procedures and systems in place that allow new owners to hit the ground running. This expands the pool of people who become business owners, which is reflected in the fact that immigrants and other minorities are more commonly found owning franchise outlets than other businesses.
The franchise system is also not the only business model that could be impacted. Companies that contract with third-party service providers (I.T. and janitorial services are common examples) and even gig-economy companies could face the prospect of being deemed a joint employer under the new rule.
The import of the NLRB's rule is that it is trying to limit the flexibility of companies to structure themselves how they deem best. It's a one-size-fits-all economic vision where every sector and business is coerced into operating under one model. Sadly, the joint employer standard is just one example of the political left's growing push to one-size America's economy.
Not only could the NLRB's rule persuade more states to redefine the joint employer relationship for their state labor laws, but states and localities are also increasingly targeting another long-established American tradition: tipped wages. For instance, Washington, D.C., banned the tipped wage structure in a voter initiative last year, meaning that the tips restaurant workers receive cannot be calculated as part of their wage.
For decades, the on-premise restaurant industry has used the tipped wage system, paying servers a sub-minimum wage with tips making up the gap—and often far exceeding it, which is why servers often prefer the setup. Instead, D.C. restaurants will be forced to pay all servers over $16 an hour by 2027, nearly three times the current base wage amount. In turn, this will likely mean costlier dining and more restaurants being forced to shutter. Progressive states like New York, Maryland, and Illinois have recently considered banning tipped wages as well, showing that the idea is spreading.
The war against the gig economy also fits within the one-size-fits-all economic push. States like California have notoriously attempted to reclassify all gig-economy workers—who traditionally operate as independent contractors—as full-scale employees. This idea has moved to Congress, making its way into the Democrat-supported Protecting the Right to Organize (PRO) Act.
Franchise stores, restaurants, and the gig economy operate far differently than the traditional concept of a 9-to-5 workplace housed at a centrally located company. Rather than viewing this as a feature of America's dynamic and flexible economy, the progressive left seems to want a monolithic economy regardless of its impact on businesses and workers. If it gets its way, we could end up with a one-size-fits-all recession.
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McFJB
Would you like $15 fries with your $35 burger? Union fat-cats, lawyers, and regulators need money, too, ya know!
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That is no longer a joke in Seattle, where the current minimum wage is $18.69/hour. Don't forget your $4 soda, with its $0.35 soda tax!
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The neofeudalists are doing what they said they were going to.
Serfs up!
This expands the pool of people who become business owners, which is reflected in the fact that immigrants and other minorities are more commonly found owning franchise outlets than other businesses.
Long as it stops immigrants from owning businesses that Americans should own then it's a good thing.
Immigrants can still operate food trucks, right?
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Competition is a good thing. Those immigrants usually bust their asses to provide exceptional service.
More law that doesn't come from legislation. Take it to SCOTUS.
SCOTUS doesn't think economic liberty is a real thing.
SCOTUS thinks expecting Congress to do its job is too much to ask and we should have an imperial President.
NLRB is a court. The problem is that it is managerially part of the executive branch. Not part of the judicial. So it ends up being politicized. The court becomes solely a tool of anti-union pro-management lawyers and pro-union anti-management lawyers instead of enforcing the right of employees to organize and bargain fairly in a labor market (the right created by that legislation). And D's and R's quite deliberately choose to dick around with that court instead of amending/repealing the legislation. An instrument of corruption that D's and R's absolutely choose to leverage for that purpose. The SC will almost always defer to that sort of court because the SC has no business micromanaging the Prez, Congress, and another court.
Hayek showed the right approach imo - called Rechtsstaat to dealing with all the problems our current system has with administrative execution of laws.
"The NLRB rationale for this change is that the prior Trump era rule allowed parent companies to unfairly avoid negotiating with workers and assuming liability for labor law violations."
More proof that the Biden Administration is in the hip pocket of the Unions.
But is it also more evidence that Trump's administration was a good one?
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Yes.
>>But in reality, it is a revision that will upend the business models of entire American industries.
can't spell Destructo without (D)
Give Me Liberty and Give Me a Drink!
But not Emma.
Fuck McDs.
Fuck Ds too.
Pluggo in his Ronald McFondled costume
the progressive left seems to want a monolithic economy
Now dedicate an article explaining why they want that.
Spoiler alert: Control.
Was there anything actually unfair about the cited Trump-era rule? Or is it just that the Democrat-controlled NLRB wants to tilt the playing field some more, and that this is another example of a good rule by the Trump administration that the Biden administration is trying to undo?
They want order and call it justice.
It's not order they want, it's power.
It's a lot easier to flex power on one corporation that it is to try to flex on 5000 individual franchisees.
Punch these f'ing scum in the head 'til they die because they will certainly do it to you- unless you are dependent on them.
I am shocked the fascists are doing fascisty things.
I for one welcome our robot burger chefs. They can't come soon enough AFAIC. This will simply accelerate the transition to automation of low-skilled jobs and I'm here for it.
Franchise ownership is one of the most common ways to achieve the American dream given that owning a franchise usually requires lower startup capital and creates an affiliation with an established brand that has ready-to-go procedures and systems in place that allow new owners to hit the ground running.
You mean ready-to-go procedures for like, how to manage and pay employees?
There are undoubtedly benefits to the franchise model for the franchise owners and the parent company, but is it a good deal for the employees as well or a way to increase the owner's share of the business's profits while weakening the employees' bargaining power?
Who cares?
Unless the employee is a shareholder, an unskilled employee's interest in how a business is run begins and ends with their agreement to take a job at the business, and tacit agreement to continue working for the business by showing up to do their job when expected.
Unions help set terms and conditions for employment, wouldn't that make them joint employers as well and open to the same liabilities? And union employees vote for those terms and conditions, making them joint employers as well. I'm not union, but when the company I work for was hiring me we negotiated terms and conditions, pay, work from home time, etc...does that make me a joint employer?
What happens if McDonald’s moves their corporate headquarters to Russia?
Mcdonalds is probably not too long for this world if it has to individually manage ALL locations in the nation. And since they're a volume business, any prolonged strike would kill them.
Of course this kind of intrusion is bad, and many non lefty corporations will be impacted, but I'm not going to shed much tears for rich wokesters who votes for the very party working hard to eliminate market options that made them rich.
Labor scored big wins recently. Efforts to fully unionize Amazon and Starbucks will only intensify in the coming months. The big companies are hoping Pelosi can rein in some the crazies of the party, but they are starting to take over.
How does a nation house and feed 3 million plus "refugees" AND fund two wars? It has to print money and or tax the rich. Guys like Bezos knows this. Plans to automate can be complicated by federal regulations on robots. By the time these people realize "Oh shit we made wrong friends" it'll be too late.
Mcdonalds is probably not too long for this world if it has to individually manage ALL locations in the nation.
Would that be all that tragic?
Of course this kind of intrusion is bad, and many non lefty corporations will be impacted, but I’m not going to shed much tears for rich wokesters who votes for the very party working hard to eliminate market options that made them rich.
I won't shed any tears if people have a harder time becoming rich in this country either. The free market believers are not making a good case that the very wealthy being able to hoard wealth is benefiting everyone else. What good are trickle down policies when very little is trickling down?
I’m sure you’re used to fluids trickling
down on you.
You certainly have an appropriate username. That is clearly your reason to exist here.
BTW, don't let the steaming pile of lefty shit Jason forget that he supports murder of the unarmed as a preventative for, well the asshole isn't real sure:
JasonT20
February.6.2022 at 6:02 pm
“How many officers were there to stop Ashlee Babbitt and the dozens of people behind her from getting into the legislative chamber to do who knows what?...”
Those proles might have put their feet on the desks of the deities worshipped by fuckwit Jason!
"...I won’t shed any tears if people have a harder time becoming rich in this country either. The free market believers are not making a good case that the very wealthy being able to hoard wealth is benefiting everyone else. What good are trickle down policies when very little is trickling down?"
Eat shit and die, asshole.
"...According to the International Franchise Association, an Obama-era iteration of the joint employer rule—..."
Obama! The lying pile of lefty shit that keeps on giving!