Why Is Panera Exempted From California's New Minimum Wage Law?
Probably because Greg Flynn, who operates 24 of the bakery cafes in California, is a longtime friend of Gov. Gavin Newsom.

When fast food restaurants across California have to start paying workers $20 per hour on April 1, one major chain will be exempted from the mandate—and it just so happens to have a connection to a longtime friend and donor to Gov. Gavin Newsom.
Panera Bread is poised to get a boost from a bizarre clause in the fast-food minimum wage law that exempts "chains that bake bread and sell it as a standalone item," Bloomberg reports, adding that "Newsom pushed for that break, according to people familiar with the matter."
That exemption stands to benefit Greg Flynn, owner and CEO of the Flynn Restaurant Group, a conglomerate that operates more than 2,300 restaurants nationally and is the second-largest Panera franchisee in the world, according to the company's website. Flynn and Newsom go way back: Bloomberg reports that the two attended the same high school at the same time—Flynn was student body president during Newsom's freshman year—and the restaurateur has donated to Newsom's gubernatorial campaigns and bragged to colleagues about his close relationship with the governor.
That relationship likely explains the weird carve-out that would exempt bakeries from the new minimum wage law, even though no one involved is willing to admit as much.
Asked directly about the bakery exemption at a press conference last year, Newsom said it was "part of the sausage making" of the legislative process. "We went back and forth, and it was part of the negotiation," he added.
Bloomberg's reporting suggests it was something Newsom sought in those negotiations: The bakery carve-out "was adopted as a means of winning the governor's support for the legislation, said a person with knowledge of the discussions. The rationale was the governor's longstanding relationship with a Panera franchisee, the person said."
Newsom signed the Fast Food Accountability and Standards Recovery Act (FAST Act) in September 2023. The law includes the $20 per hour minimum wage and a variety of other regulations that will apply to restaurant chains with more than 60 locations nationally.
Because labor costs account for a significant chunk of the overhead at any fast food restaurant, the new law is expected to have several repercussions. McDonald's and Chipotle have already announced plans to raise menu prices. Delivery drivers for Pizza Hut have been laid off. More automation is likely to occur.
Flynn also operates Applebee's, Taco Bell, Arby's, Wendy's, Pizza Hut, and Planet Fitness franchisees across 44 states, according to his company's website—but his only California-based establishments are several Applebee's (which are not subject to the new law since it is not defined as a fast food restaurant) and 24 Panera cafes.
It's fair to question how much the carve-out for Panera will even matter. In an environment where other fast-food restaurants competing with Panera for labor are required to pay $20 per hour, Panera will likely have to offer comparable wages in order to attract and retain workers. (One might also wonder if McDonald's and Burger King will suddenly get into the bakery business.)
In other words, the real story here isn't that a successful businessman was able to get a special exemption written into law. And, indeed, it's hard to blame Flynn for looking out for what's in his businesses' best interest here—he'd previously warned state lawmakers that passing the FAST Act would "effectively kill the franchise business model in the state" and put 728,000 jobs at risk.
The real scandal is that Newsom was apparently willing to push for this special exemption that benefits his personal friend while throwing other California businesses (and consumers) under the bus.
The deeper lesson is that giving the government more power to set wages (or regulate other aspects of the economy) creates the conditions for exactly this sort of thing to happen. It could be that a wealthy special interest used his connections to the governor to secure special treatment, or that a governor tried to help out his friend. Either way, it couldn't have happened without the government injecting itself into the relationship between workers and employers.
And the more the government does that, the more opportunities there will be for officials to reward their friends and punish their enemies. That's not fair, nor should it be desirable. Panera—or any business—shouldn't survive or fail in California because of its connections in the halls of power.
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Your local Mickey D's will sell you a burger with a separate, baked onsite Artisanal bun...I'm thinking the makers of commercial baking equipment are going to see a boom in Cali.
Nah. Nothing says the bun has to be artisanal, just that the restaurant must "sell" it. Every day, the golden arches will pour a cup of flour and two tablespoons of water into a bowl, microwave it into a brick shape, and put it on sale behind the counter for $99.95, then throw it away at the end of the day.
They won't be allowed to be THAT obvious, At $10 each, they will actually sell 1 or 2.
Uhm, the carve out is "that obivious"
Exempt: restaurants that have green signs with yellow writing and Open no earlier than 9am nor later than 10am on Tuesdays.
What annoys me even more about politicians - is they actually think they got away with it without anyone catching on. Yes, they think we are THAT dumb.
The author began the title of his article with "Why . . . .?"
A simple but multiple part answer:
(a) basic crookedness in government, which is accepted
(b) a well placed
political donationbribe or two(c) widespread economic ignorance enabling such laws.
All of the criticisms about this carve out are valid, but in reality, the minimum wage is going to affect Panera the same as other fast food places. Once the floor is at $20 everywhere else, why would anybody go work at Panera for $15/hour?
Ah, good question. NYC set a $20/hr floor for delivery bikers in Dec–I’ve been one for 5 years. It’s a contract model, so a little different. But same forces at play. Before Dec, it was unlimited signup. So a large pool of us sharing the loot. When a wage floor got set, UberEats created a driver cap–by allocating signup slots in advance. There is a HUGE glut of unskilled labor, if haven’t noticed. Now maybe they weren’t making $20/hr, but were making more than the zero after the law kicked in. Now the NYC bikers have no work. So over in in CA as with anywhere, there is a fixed bucket of cash for bigMacs. Workers are going to be cut and/or stores closed. Where are they going to go? Somewhere that pays less than $20 but more than $0--that they are qualified for. Any guess what that is in CA?
They can go to one the many websites that are offered here and sign up to do webcam nudie shows or indie porn and make thousands per month, working from home on their computer. Lots of ads for that service here in Reason.
Because Pannera may still be hiring while only programmers, roboticists and instalation techs will be getting jobs from McDonald's. I suspect automation will drive out the Liberal Arts majors who work fast food places.
Sorry, but the governor's a step ahead of you. The bakery exemption only applies if the bakery existed prior to September 15, 2023.
https://twitter.com/GonzoEcon/status/1762895319350788548/photo/1
Only people that are ignorant about business and the free market, or just drunk on power and don't give a shit about how citizens can prosper comes up with 'minimum wages.' This is affront to people who work hard to get skilled and move up into a better life, but find it next to impossible because a rich dictator decides who prosper and who doesn't! Minimum wages creates inflation, more poverty, encourages laziness and apathy, entitlement, lack of drive, and makes it harder for people to afford anything. Any so-called economists that says otherwise, are bought and sold to the government. The Netherlands tried communism and almost collapsed! They vowed to never do that again after embracing a capitalists economy!
Had to ALREADY be a "bakery"
“Fast food restaurant” shall not include an establishment that on September 15, 2023, operates a bakery that produces for sale on the establishment’s premises bread, as defined under Part 136 of Subchapter B of Chapter I of Title 21 of the Code of Federal Regulations, so long as it continues to operate such a bakery. This exemption applies only where the establishment produces for sale bread as a stand-alone menu item, and does not apply if the bread is available for sale solely as part of another menu item.
But it does also seem to exempt the deli counters in grocery store bakeries where you might be able to buy a sub.
But grocery stores aren't fast food restaurants.
And the part about bakeries above is in the section of the law that defines what is and what isn't a "fast-food" restaurant.
My local grocery store has a Starbucks in it. The Walmart near my mother's house has a McDonalds in it. Are those "fast-food restaurants". The sub/deli counter in the deli at my store has a name separate from the grocery store, it sells pizza (whole and by the slice), chinese food, meat and veggies plates, and subs, has a small seating area, soda machines, and exists in each store and the grocery chain has more than 60 stores. The sub/deli area certainly might otherwise be rendered a "fast-food" restaurant by some bureaucrat later.
But it's co-located with the bakery, uses the bakery output, etc. So would be more clearly and expressly exempted.
And, indeed, it’s hard to blame Flynn for looking out for what’s in his businesses’ best interest here—he’d previously warned state lawmakers that passing the FAST Act would “effectively kill the franchise business model in the state” and put 728,000 jobs at risk.
Actually, no, I disagree. Playing to have the rules written so that they exclude you means you’re using the coercive power of government to give yourself an edge. You’re just inserting yourself into the government, so the evils of the government are your own evils. I’m not going to excuse this blatant level of corrupt dealings, no more than I excuse big business that pay lobbyists to pass laws that legislate their rivals out of business. The cross-over between business and government is anti free market and is a destructive force on society.
Beyond that, the level of blatant corruption at play here is hilarious. It’s just so obvious, bare, and straightforward it belongs in a farcical movie. But no, this is just California on a normal day. It’s a fucking cesspool of over-governance.
There's no reason to specifically exclude bakeries. What public policy is advanced by letting locations that make bread have an exception? How does that advance any kind of policy interest? It simply doesn't. It's utterly indefensible and nobody is even trying.
The old, wise Sage Senator from Vermont:
“Bread lines are a good thing”.
Bread lines for the proles in California.
The old, wise Sage Senator from Vermont:
“Bread lines are a good thing”.
...just as long as Comrade Bernie doesn't have to stand in line for bread.
Coming soon: California prohibits the sale of more than 23 kinds of bread at any location. Asked about the reasoning at a recent press conference Newsome stated, "It's all part of the sausage making. We decided that nobody needs to sell more than 23 varieties of bread. Except for, ya know, my personal buddies. They will be getting exemptions because...sausage or something."
The exception for Panera Bread could create an equal protection problem.
The fundamental right to pay fast food employees $15/hr is nothing to be scoffed at.
What public policy is advanced by letting locations that make bread have an exception?
LOL. Let's ask civil libertarian hero Gary Johnson!
So this is a bad form of government carve outs and protections. This criticism should be consistently applied.
I guess people that make bread, won't make much bread.
I wonder what the cost of a Big Mac will be in California after that law goes into effect.
If you have to ask, then you can't afford it.
And if you can afford it, you should be taxed more.
I SAID "So what will the cost of a Big Mac be in California after the law goes into effect?"!
Just wait until Barbara Lee gets her $50 minimum wage enacted. She says $127,000 for a family of four is "just barely enough to get by."
Never enters her mind that there may just a cause and effect between high minimum wages and "affordability". After a Big Mac Happy Meal jumps cost to $25, she'll be back demanding $100/hr.
Once they replace the Liberal Arts majors with robots and automated kiosks they price will be quite reasonable.
Guess those Liberal Arts types better learn how to code if they want to keep working fast food.
You clearly don't go to fast food restaurants. None of those people went to college, none even finished high school, most appear to be illiterate criminals and illegal immigrants that don't speak English. But apparently they deserve to be paid what roofers and bookkeepers are paid.
"Part of the sausage-making" = "Taking care of my wealthy donors".
If it isn't already obvious, government never makes anything cheaper, better, or faster.
Government always -- always! -- exerts a drag on efficiency and productivity.
I note that since the government's response to COVID, excuse me, our self-inflicted economic lobotomy, there have been few calls for letting the government run anything, much less something as big as healthcare.
And, again, this is hilarious relative to Reason's demented "Alabama obliterates IVF technology from science books around the globe!" narrative.
It's a legit situation where someone broke into a medical facility and legitimately did something between borderline killing some kids and sterilizing some women, the courts are saying "Hold up." and the legislature is jumping to "We're on it!"... making sausage... and Reason is full ahead with the insanely retarded implication of "People should be allowed to break into IVF clinics, destroy embryos, and sterilize women. Otherwise, there wouldn't be abortion, er, I mean IVF."!
"The real scandal is that Newsom was apparently willing to push for this special exemption that benefits his personal friend while throwing other California businesses and consumers under the bus."
Two strikes, Eric. The real scandal is that government no longer has ANY limitations on the "sausage" it makes in the legislative and executive branches. The fact that hundred-page laws using tens of thousands of unconstitutionally broad and vague words covering up dozens or hundreds of hidden carve-outs, exemptions and other corruptions are almost never struck down by the judiciary - THAT is the real scandal here.\!
What's the difference between this and the Governor of Pennsylvania picking and choosing "essential businesses" during the COVID lockdown. Politically connected businesses were allowed to stay open, while others of the same type were forced to close.
A lethal pandemic?
Not lethal enough.
True. Sadly, Kirkland and his fellow travelers are still alive.
Jim don't worry anime nerd below has "expert" opinion. You can tell he has a fully developed brain from screen name fetish.
"What’s the difference between this and the Governor of Pennsylvania picking and choosing “essential businesses” during the COVID lockdown."
Newsom did so also.
Fascism in action.
Invidious
And you like this scumbag for president………
Ahh good ol california commies, always showing us how to create a group of more equal animals
Tell me that California is going down the drain without saying as much.
"Why Is Panera Exempted From California's New Minimum Wage Law? Probably because Greg Flynn, who operates 24 of the bakery cafes in California, is a longtime friend of Gov. Gavin Newsom."
Demonstrating once again cronyism is alive and well in the Peoples' Republic of Kalifornia.
NY Gov is trying to convince everyone the state is not anti-business and they do crap like this.
https://abc7ny.com/dsny-trash-bin-plastic-packaging-recycling/14475595/
"It's called the "Packaging Reduction and Recycling Infrastructure Act." The bill looks to greatly reduce how much plastic packaging New York consumes over the next 12 years. It also bans toxic chemicals like pigments in plastics that make them difficult to recycle.
It would shift penalties to the plastic producers. Businesses would be charged fees depending on how much plastic is used in their packaging.
State regulators would also be able to fine companies as much as $1,000 for violations.
Officials say the best way to increase recycling is to reduce the amount needed to recycle."
That's how they step shaking down companies.
https://ag.ny.gov/press-release/2023/attorney-general-james-takes-historic-action-against-pepsico-endangering
""Hundreds of PepsiCo Products Found Along Buffalo River, Jeopardizing the Environment and Public Health
AG James’ Lawsuit Charges PepsiCo with Harming the Public and Failing to Warn Consumers of Environmental and Health Threats of its Single-Use Plastic Packaging""
If Applebees is not fast food then neither would Panera
I will bet there are at least ten pages of small print explaining what makes a fast food place and they couldn't manage to include Chick Fill A without including Pannara.
Sounds blatantly unconstitutional to me, given that we have this little principle called "equal protection under the laws". The rest of the industry in California should waste to time at all suing Newsom's hair-gelled monkey ass.
Some individuals and entities are more equally protected than others. It’s the Newsom way.
So any restaurant in CA can be exempt if they make a tray of Rhodes Bake and Serve daily?
LOFL!
Not unless they were already doing it prior to Sep 15, 2023.
Yeah, I saw that requirement later. Party Poopers.
It's worse than a carve-out for Panera. It's a carve-out for EXISTING Paneras. There has to be an on-site bakery that was in operation before Sept 15, 2023. If someone opens a new Panera, it won't qualify. I don't know how it will apply if someone moves an existing Panera.
I also have questions about the definition of "fast food restaurant" and "national chain". Some franchises operate in just a few states. Are they "national"? The ambiguity in this law invites lawsuits.
Panera's not really fast. You just order at the counter and wait at your table to get the food, eventually. And notice that the sandwich is really small, and the salad has a lot of lettuce.
But more good news for tax scofflaws (i.e. everyone): if you get dessert afterward from the on-site bakery and take it home, you dodge the sales tax (since it's defined as groceries). If you eat it in the restaurant, you pay the sales tax.
Remember back in 2015 or so when we all dismissed "Fight for $15" as mere union grandstanding, thinking nobody with a functioning brain stem could possibly take it seriously.
Good times, that was.
At that time the Unions were pushing for it, yet they wanted their members to be exempt.
They sure didn't want to pay it to their own staff (like janitors at the union clubhouse).
15 an hour is already too low, thanks to inflation.
Communist apparatchiks, I mean, California state legislators, are already suggesting 50 bucks and hour as a minimum for state employees.
So 'reason,' nominally a 'libertarian' rag, is upset that a business won't be subject to government regulation?
They see "loopholes," we see "remaining freedoms."
Put so many loopholes in that wall everyone tries to cheat it.
lol and yet here you are reading it.
I suspect this offends the ideal of equal treatment under the law. If you are fucking over McDonald's then you'd better fuck over Pannera as well. Crony Capitalism sucks almost as much as socialism.
Once again, Newsom proves to be a greasy cunt.
I wonder what Putin charges to eliminate political targets.
Is Reason going to report on Berkshires annual. It’s pretty fucking crazy that Buffet is accusing feds and states of shaking down or collapsing the ability to invest in transportation rail or energy.
Meh, guess Pravda will call it the state/fed management and rationing of transport/energy climate crisis.
calm down, Vlad.
Who's surprised, he's the same Calvin Loathsome who enjoyed a maskless dinner at a French Restaurant while the normies had to wear masks at Subway
Ah, lockdowns for you, the French Laundry for me and my close associates.
Government at its finest.
Entitled, elitist government.
More stinking Democrat corruption!
"In other words, the real story here isn't that a successful businessman was able to get a special exemption written into law."
"The real scandal is that Newsom was apparently willing to push for this special exemption that benefits his personal friend while throwing other California businesses (and consumers) under the bus."
They're the same things. The latter only details HOW. Lobbyists and politicians are already in a friends with benefits relationship. The taxpayers and businesses are thrown under the bus even if Gregg Flynn got the exemption by simply being a mega donor rather than a personal friend.
I suspect the bread exemption was also meant to spare the Asian bakery chains that are all over California, although they might not be considered as "fast food".
That new law is half-baked!
The real story is that Newsom said that Biden's age is an asset, and that he has an extraordinary record as President.
The man will clearly say anything, which I guess makes him a politician.
Fascism as an economic system.
Luckily the Democrats have no plans to apply their single party rule grift schemes to the whole country.
Well I'm sure shining a light on this will cause Newsom to either re-think or face some stern conseuqen--
Sorry I couldn't actually finish that sentence. Our tolerance level for obvious corruption is 100%.
Probably because liberals eat at Panera.
No such exemption for Arby's.
Why wouldn't every other establishment "bake bread and sell it as a stand alone item"?
You clearly don’t read the comments.
Gruesome thought of that already. Only places that were baking and selling bread on Sept 15, 2023 are exempt.
Not sure what happens when Gruesome's crony wants to open a Panera at a new site.
lol good luck hiring anyone but crackheads when there every business around is paying a minimum of $20 lmfao
Panera will be able to pick and choose among the workers McDonalds and most of the other fast food places replace with robots.
Newsom said it was "part of the sausage making" of the legislative process.
aka "Stop asking questions."
Newsom is a perfect example of a corrupt politician.
You mean we don’t normally just hand out “with, not of” hardship tax breaks and favors to companies like Pfizer or Moderna or Panera when their customers (e.g.) start keeling over *with, not of* their lemonade?
I guess libertarians only make special exceptions to their special exceptions for abortion clin... er, I mean IVF... er, women's reproductive medici... uh... family planning and reproductive health clinics! Yeah!