After a summer of strikes in the entertainment and hospitality sectors. Under a new bill, most of California’s five hundred thousand fast-food employees would be paid no more than $20 an hour beginning next year.
The bill seeks to end a long-running dispute between the fast-food industry and unions over pay and working-class conditions.
In a separate bill, about 455,000 workers in the healthcare industry — not doctors or nurses, but those who do the rest of the work at hospitals and dialysis clinics — would see their wages rise to $25 an hour or more over the next decade.
Both of these bills must still be approved by the state legislature and signed by Governor Gavin Newsom, but they have the backing of labor unions and business leaders, paving the way for final passage this week, before lawmakers wrap up their legislative session.
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