In a fundamental shift in opinion, the LA County Board of Supervisors unanimously approved a plan today to redistribute power from the county’s chief executive officer to themselves. Then, we revisit last night's AT30 event on raising the minimum wage, taped at the El Portal Theatre in North Hollywood with industry experts and workers weighing in the impact and implementation of a $15 wage hike.
What America's largest local government agency reorg means for LA County residents
The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors unanimously approved a plan today to redistribute power from the county’s chief executive officer to themselves.
The vote shows a fundamental shift in opinion among the supervisors, who as recently as 2007 had voted to give more power to the county’s CEO.
While the board had hoped that empowering the CEO would streamline county processes, a 2008 assessment by a county advisory commission found that it had added a layer of bureaucracy and led to conflict between the supervisors and the CEO. Supervisors often continued to micromanage departments, even to the point of having their aides ghostwrite memos that had ostensibly come from department heads.
Will this new plan help to streamline county functioning? Is it important to have someone at the top to blame (or plaudit) for the state of the county? What effects will this have on an agency with a $27-billion budget and 100,000 employees?
STATEMENT OF PROCEEDINGS FOR FEBRUARY 24, 2015 (see p. 35)
L.A. County Revisions to County Governance
Guests:
Sheila Kuehl, Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors representing District 3, which includes the San Fernando Valley, the Westside of Los Angeles and coastal areas between Venice and the Ventura Countyline. She is a former California State Senator.
Jessica Levinson, Professor of Law, at Loyola Law School where she specializes in governance issues; she’s also Vice President of the Los Angeles Ethics Commission
Zev Yaroslavsky, former Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors, representing District 3, which includes the San Fernando Valley, the Westside of Los Angeles and coastal areas between Venice and the Ventura Countyline. His op-ed on ways to revamp the county government was recently published in the Los Angeles Times.
Minimum wage: The future of the hourly worker in LA (#AT30)
Not even the current state of Hollywood’s film business can match the drama of the minimum wage debate in Los Angeles.
So what better place than North Hollywood's historic El Portal Theatre to stage multiple debates about the influential vote of the LA City Council to raise minimum wage in the city to $15 over the course of four years. AirTalk's special event last night focused on the impact and implementation of a wage hike. Industry leaders most affected by the pay boost, plus other brainiacs who gamed out the domino effect, discussed three key areas: impact on the restaurant industry; next steps for LA businesses, workers and government leaders; and how neighboring cities will respond to LA's bold experiment.
Whether fast food or fancy feasts, restaurant industry faces unique fate after wage hike
Restaurant owners who employ tipped wait staff lobbied City Councilemembers to account for the fact that servers' wages often amount to more than $15 an hour when including gratuities, thereby making a wage hike unnecessary.
Even so, workers' representatives say yearly incomes for wait staff are near the poverty line and should not be treated differently than other low-wage workers.
"Seventy percent of hourly servers in restaurants earn less than $25,000 a year. This vote was passed to help those who need it most," argues Kathy Hoang, Director of Restaurant Opportunities Center of Los Angeles.
Restaurateurs George Abou-Daoud and Michaela Mendelsohn say the wage hike places too big a burden on small businesses to solve the nation's income gap.
"I want to keep my people, but to dramatically spike my prices to adjust for cost of labor just won't work," says Abou-Daoud who co-founded the Neighborhood Restaurant Coalition of LA.
"We can't go higher on prices, so how do we get through this? We could cut back labor hours, but we really don't want to do that," explains Mendelsohn who owns El Pollo Loco franchises in Southern California.
As for fast food restaurants, tensions exist between determining fair compensation for teenagers in their first jobs versus adults who need the service job as their primary, long-term employment.
Some franchise owners say they will have to cut staff and replace cashiers with self-serve automated kiosks. In a Jetsons-like move, McDonald's is testing cashier-free locations throughout the U.S., including a location in Downtown LA. Is that the inevitable future?
"Technology can't replace human interaction. We'll still be dependent on restaurant workers for their service,” says Hoang.
We heard multiple perspectives on how the wage hike is impacting this massive, motley industry that is critical to the LA economy.
Guests:
George Abou-Daoud, Restaurant Proprietor and Chef; Co-founder of The Neighborhood Restaurant Coalition of Los Angeles - representing over 1,000 independent LA restaurants
Kathy Hoang, Director, Restaurant Opportunities Center of Los Angeles
Michaela Mendelsohn, Owner of El Pollo Loco franchise locations with over 33 years of experience in the industry; transgender activist
The Raise the Wage campaign won an historic victory, what's next?
In the aftermath of the City Council's passage, national news called the wage hike a "bombshell" and some columnists characterized it as "an experiment" unleashed on one of the country's largest cities. Mayor Eric Garcetti trumpeted the historic law for “enabling working families in LA to lift themselves out of poverty and tying our minimum wage to the cost of living to make this justice last. LA as a whole will benefit from this boost: we have always prospered the most when everyone is able to spend money into our economy."
“Studies and economists have told the council that this will add 6 billion dollars per year to L.A.’s economy,” says LA City Councilmember Paul Krekorian.
In the meantime, business leaders complain mom & pop operations will go bankrupt.
"It's too much too fast for the smaller businesses. We need a longer phase-in period,” says Nicole Shahenian of the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce. She adds, "The only restaurants that will be able to survive this are the Applebees of the world.”
Since the passage, companies and union leaders have sought to tailor its implementation, including a stymied first attempt to exclude workers who negotiate labor agreements, which some perceived as a strategy to drive more unionization in the city.
How are companies preparing for the hike? What effect will the wage hike have on the tumultuous housing market? What will be the long-term effect on the types of industries, and types of workers, that can thrive in Los Angeles?
Guests:
Paul Krekorian, City Councilmember for the 2nd district encompassing the San Fernando Valley
Nicole Shahenian, Vice President of Government Relations, Hollywood Chamber of Commerce
Domino effect beyond the City of LA
Other cities in Southern California expected to adopt a higher wage soon are Santa Monica and West Hollywood. As well, LA County's Board of Supervisors is debating a wage hike that would be imposed on companies based in unincorporated parts of the county. While the California Senate passed a bill proposing a statewide increase to $13 an hour, analysts say it faces an unlikely fate in the Assembly and with Governor Jerry Brown.
Places like Torrance, El Segundo, and Glendale have made no moves to raise their minimum wage.
Californians are dealing with a patchwork of policies that push and pull on workers and business owners.
“It will be a bit crazy because one side of the road to the other, there’s going to be different rules of the road,” said Tracy Rafter, CEO of the Los Angeles County Business Federation. “Many businesses operate in different cities, different jurisdictions. How they’re going to navigate managing that—recruiting, hiring, selling, and competing—is going to be tricky.”
UCLA labor expert Chris Tilly says studies show something different: “In most cases, the effects of raising the minimum wage in one county and not the surrounding ones are very small, not statistically significant, it nets to close to zero change in jobs.”
Some cities aim to lure LA businesses away from the new ordinance, while other cities worry their best workers will focus on LA jobs for the higher wage.
How will your city respond?
Guests:
Tracy Rafter, Founding CEO, Los Angeles County Business Federation, also known as BizFed
Chris Tilly, Director of UCLA's Institute for Research on Labor and Employment