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Restaurant franchisees say they're the real losers of California's $20 fast-food minimum wage. AdvertisementFranchisees say they have to bear the brunt of California's new $20 minimum wage for fast-food workers. But the $20 wage applies to both corporate-owned and franchise restaurants, even if the franchisee just owns one or two restaurants. She added that the new $20 wage felt like an "unfair target on our backs." "You're going to have to have the mega owners as they're called, or 20 stores, a hundred stores, 500 outlets.
Persons: , Keith Miller, Brian Hom, We're, Hom, Miller, he'd, Mike Mangoine, Jessica D'Ambre, D'Ambre, Matthew Haller, Burger King, they're Organizations: Service, Business, Subway, McDonald's Corporation, Los Angeles Times, Times, International Franchise Association, Taco Bell Locations: California, San Jose , California, Los Angeles, Inland, Burger, McDonald's
And it is in these districts, from the Central Valley to the outskirts of Los Angeles and down to Orange County, where the House majority will likely be won or lost in 2024. Republicans currently hold a slim 218-seat majority, a precarious position for the party as the 213-member House Democratic Caucus works to flip the chamber this year. Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty ImagesKen Calvert, 41st DistrictFirst elected to the House: 1992AdvertisementCalvert is the longest-serving California Republican in Congress. Calvert won most of his races by large margins before redistricting, and he last faced a truly competitive reelection fight in 2008. Valadao's return to Congress was overshadowed by his decision to become one of 10 House Republicans to vote to impeach President Donald Trump in the aftermath of the Capitol riot.
Persons: , Kevin McCarthy —, Joe Biden, Young Kim, Bill Clark, Kim, Ed Royce, Gil Cisneros, McCarthy, Cisneros, Biden, She'll, Joe Kerr, Michelle Steel, Harley Rouda, Rouda, Dana Rohrabacher, Steel, Jay Chen, Derek Tran, Mike Garcia, Tom Williams, Garcia, Katie Hill, Christy Smith, Smith, George Whitesides, Ken Calvert, Calvert, he's, Will Rollins, Rollins, John Duarte, Duarte isn't, Duarte, Jim Jordan's, Jordan, Mike Johnson of, Democrat Adam Gray, Gray, David Valadao, Valadao, TJ Cox, Valadao's, Donald Trump, Rudy Salas, Salas Organizations: Service, Golden State, Business, Republicans, Democratic Caucus, Inc, Getty, California State Assembly, GOP, Democratic, Navy, Biden, NASA, onetime Virgin Galactic, District, California Republican, Republican, House Democrats, Democrat, Trump, Democratic Rep, Capitol Locations: California, Bakersfield, Golden, Los Angeles, Orange County, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, Steel, Los Angeles County, Riverside County, Congress, Inland, Corona, Mike Johnson of Louisiana
Andy Wiesmann, 62, settled in Medellín, Colombia, after spending much of his life in California's Inland Empire. He couldn't afford an apartment in California, and he decided to move out of the country to preserve his health and happiness. Leaving California for MexicoWiesmann grew up about 60 miles east of Los Angeles and spent most of his life there. His relationship ended amid his hospital stay, and he moved back to California — though he didn't have any place to stay. Wiesmann said he has little intention of leaving Colombia except for vacations to see his kids in California and New York.
Persons: Andy Wiesmann, Wiesmann, I've, Mexico Wiesmann, he's, he'll, they're Organizations: Service, Golden State, Business, US Locations: Medellín, Colombia, Inland, Golden, California, Mexico, Los Angeles, East, Africa, Virginia, United States, Cabo San Lucas, cafés, Bogota, New York, South America
Jayne Jordan, 61, and her husband moved to Azle, Texas, 30 minutes from Fort Worth, in August. The cost of their housing was so much less than in California that Jordan was able to retire early. AdvertisementThis as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Jayne Jordan, 61, about her decision to move from the Los Angeles area to Azle, Texas, in August. Jordan's new home in Azle, Texas. When we first got to Texas, it was really hot, so we really got to experience the summer heat.
Persons: Jayne Jordan, Jordan, , school's, We're, it's, It's, we've, haven't Organizations: Service, Texas Gas Locations: Azle , Texas, Fort Worth, California, Texas, Los Angeles, Irvine, Corona, Azle, Inland
But the Central Valley is booming, making it one of the few areas of the state experiencing sustained growth. But the 2020 Census revealed a stunning statistic: California's population growth had slowed in the prior decade, which resulted in the state's first-ever loss of a congressional district. But in California's Central Valley, the population is booming, driven by higher birth rates and substantial migration from more expensive coastal counties, according to The Economist. AdvertisementAdvertisementIn Northern California's Central Valley, San Joaquin County is poised to become a primary beneficiary of this inward migration. The state is projecting that the Northern California county will have almost 1 million residents by 2060, up from its current population of about 780,000 residents.
Persons: , Jane Tyska, aren't Organizations: Service, Golden, California Department of Finance, Golden State, Alameda County —, Oakland, San, Media, East Bay Times, Getty, San Bernardino counties —, Inland Locations: California, San Joaquin County, Bay Area, Golden State, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Central, Golden, Francisco, Alameda County, Berkeley, Alameda, Bay, Southern California, Riverside, San Bernardino, Central Valley, Northern California, San Joaquin
Late last year, it installed 38 chargers for electric trucks operated by Maersk at two sites in the Los Angeles area. There were 1.8 million conventional medium and heavy duty commercial vehicles operating in the state in 2021, according to data from the California Air Resources Board. Arnold said electric charging sites might be more lucrative than traditional industrial outdoor storage properties. The EV-charging business' chicken-and-egg problemOne of the biggest constraints to the development of charging sites is the availability of power. PDS operates about 320 diesel rigs, Gillis said, but because of the rules, will purchase "20 to 30 electric trucks" a year to steadily electrify its fleet.
Persons: Henrik Holland, John O'Leary, O'Leary's, Holland, Crawford Arnold, Arnold, Southern California Reuters Arnold, Vernon, Rivian, Gage, Zeina, Azzi, she'd, Jim Hurless, Hurless, Michael Bresnahan, Bresnahan, Elon Musk, Tesla, Greg Pearson, Pearson, Frank Schulz, Marijan Murat, Jim Gillis, Gillis, Emil Abdelshehid, We're, Nikola, Moshe Cohen, Cohen Organizations: Shell, Prologis, Maersk, Daimler Truck North, Mercedes, Freightliner, Government, California Air Resources Board, US Department of Energy, IOS, Investors, Shipping, Southern California Reuters, Amazon, FedEx, UPS, Colorado ., Chateau Energy Solutions, Tesla, Klabin, Getty, Los, Pacific Drayage Services, Los Angeles Department of Water, PDS, Volvo, Inc Locations: Southern California, Danish, Los Angeles, Long, Los Angeles County, Torrance, Daimler Truck North America, California, Vernon, of Long Beach, Newark , New Jersey, Texas, New York City, New Jersey, Colorado, Inland, Fontana, San Bernardino, Brooklyn
“This race is quickly consolidating,” said GOP fundraiser Charles Moran, a Trump delegate in 2016 and 2020. California was home to the so-called Trump resistance during his time in office, and Trump often depicts California as representing all he sees wrong in America. That created a competitive environment where Democratic Rep. Nancy Pelosi ’s district in San Francisco awarded the same number of GOP delegates as a rural, conservative heartland district. The state party — strongly influenced by House Speaker Kevin McCarthy of Bakersfield, a Trump loyalist — “shifted everything to help Donald Trump,” Fleishman said. The California rules are expected to be challenged at a state party convention next week, though reversing course is seen as unlikely.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, , Charles Moran, , haven’t, General Xavier Becerra, George W, Bush, Democrat Al Gore, Nancy Pelosi ’, Jessica Millan Patterson, Jon Fleishman, Kevin McCarthy, ” Fleishman, Ron DeSantis, ” Ken Cuccinelli, Steve Frank, Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, George H.W, it's, John McCain, Barack Obama, Mitt Romney, Obama, Hillary Clinton Organizations: ANGELES, White, GOP, Trump, Republican, Republican White, , U.S, Trump National Golf Club Los Angeles, Democrat, California GOP, Democratic, Florida Gov, Homeland Security, California’s Republican Party Locations: U.S, California, Iowa, America, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Bakersfield, Michigan, Nevada, George H.W . Bush, Central, Orange County
Jackie Burse moved from Orange County, California, to San Antonio, Texas, in 2021. “I'm a conservative and I feel like it's difficult to have any opinions in California other than liberal,” Burse said. In San Antonio, I rent a cute little three-bedroom, two-bathroom house that I pay $1,600 for each month. I live 10 minutes from downtown San Antonio, which is home to The River Walk. I'm really happy to be living in San Antonio and would make the move all over again.
Persons: Jackie Burse, “ I'm, ” Burse, I'm, It's, Jackie Burse I'm, I've, Burse’s, — that's, Burse Organizations: Service, Inland, Golden State, Texans, Gas, Antonio, The Chino Unified Valley School District, Republican Locations: Orange County , California, San Antonio , Texas, California, Wall, Silicon, Orange County, San Antonio, San Gabriel, Inland Empire, Los Angeles, Ontario, Golden, I've, Texas, In Texas, The Chino
The attorney general, a Democrat, said the school district policy amounted to the “forced outing” of transgender students. It also might deter other school districts in California from imposing similar requirements. In recent weeks, the Anderson Union High School District in Northern California and the Murrieta Valley and Temecula Valley unified school districts in the Inland Empire have enacted policies similar to the one enacted by Chino Valley Unified. Orange Unified School District board members are also scheduled to consider a transgender notification policy on Thursday. Nearly a month into its school year, the Chino Valley Unified School District must shelve its notification policy and await further court proceedings.
Persons: Rob Bonta, Bonta, Judge Thomas S, Garza, Andrea Johnston, ” Mr Organizations: Unified School District, San Bernardino Superior Court, Chino Valley Unified, Anderson Union High School District, Orange Unified School District, Chino Valley Unified School District, Chino Valley Unified School Locations: Chino, San Bernardino, California, Northern California, Temecula, Inland, Chino Valley
The attorney general, a Democrat, said the policies amounted to the “forced outing” of transgender students. The other districts include Anderson Union High School District in Northern California and the Murrieta Valley and Temecula Valley school districts in the Inland Empire. Mr. Bonta filed his lawsuit in San Bernardino Superior Court asking for a temporary injunction against the Chino Valley policy and seeking a permanent order blocking it. He argues that the policy violates the California Constitution because it discriminates against transgender students, denies their right to education and violates their right to privacy. “This is another ploy to stop all the districts around California from adopting a common sense legal policy.
Persons: Bonta, Tony Thurmond, Sonja Shaw, Mr, Thurmond, Ms, Shaw, Organizations: Unified School District, Democrats, Anderson Union High School District, Inland Empire, San Bernardino Superior Court, New York Times Locations: Chino, San Bernardino County, California, United States, Chino Valley, Los Angeles, Northern California, Temecula Valley, Inland, San Bernardino
Laura Dern, 56, is an Oscar- and Emmy-winning actress who starred in the films “Inland Empire,” “Mask” and “Marriage Story” and TV’s “Big Little Lies.” She is co-author with her mother, actress Diane Ladd, of the joint memoir “Honey, Baby, Mine” (Grand Central). She spoke with Marc Myers. When I was 7, director Marty Scorsese asked me a question. I was with my mother, Diane Ladd, in Tucson, Ariz., where she was filming “Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore.” Marty said, “Want to watch your mom?”
The Florida Democratic Party noted it has had a Municipal Victory Program since 2016 that includes efforts to fundraise and help school board candidates. Historically, it hasn’t taken a lot of cash to influence school board races, which are generally nonpartisan and often draw low voter turnout. In a 2018 survey, just 9 percent of school board officials reported spending more than $5,000. “What Ron DeSantis is doing in Florida — supporting a bunch of these school board candidates — is really smart, because the No. Some of the liberal efforts to push back against conservatives in school board races are well established.
Local operators have installed prayer rooms and hung flags from workers' home countries in office bullpens to attract and retain staff. Warehouse work pays well — often double the local minimum wage — for people without college degrees or specialized trade skills. Organizing efforts have sprung up, as some unions see the pace and danger of warehouse work as a chance to mobilize. A leaked memo from 2021, first reported by Recode, showed Amazon warehouses had annual turnover of 159% in 2020. Amazon employs more warehouse workers than any other company, with a US warehouse workforce of roughly 700,000 people.
What binds them, despite different nationalities, immigration stories, and languages, are warehouse jobs. As Columbus' warehouse development begins encroaching into residential areas, a consensus is gathering here — as it has elsewhere — that warehouses make for poor neighbors. Tariq Tarey for InsiderIn Canal Winchester, Halstead's efforts to put the question of warehouse development before voters were stymied. The town council bypassed her group's referendum by declaring a state of emergency to approve the warehouse development. There aren't clear lines between the winners and losers of Columbus' warehouse boom.
As the US emerged from the Great Recession, cheap real estate and the rise of e-commerce collided to create a warehousing boom. Now warehouse boomtowns shoot up in places like California's Inland Empire, Pennsylvania's Lehigh County, and Columbus, Ohio, and the number of warehouse workers has nearly tripled in a decade. Here, Insider explores how the rise of warehouses and warehouse work has changed the US and its citizens as we became a Warehouse Nation. A surge in warehouse workUsing data and on-the-ground reporting, Insider looked at the opportunities and hidden costs of the rise of warehouse work. Read more from 'Warehouse Nation'A look from Insider at how the warehouse boom has reshaped America.
In other words, big money is buying up warehouse space as fast as smaller owners can sell. The coronavirus pandemic accelerated this change, with warehouse investment outpacing office investment in 2020 and 2021, according to CBRE. A Prologis warehouse in Ichikawa City, Japan. Prologis, Blackstone, and the rest of big money duke it outOther big-money investors have increasingly invested in warehouses. The UK's Segro once sold warehouse space to Blackstone — now it's acquiring its own warehouses for last-mile delivery that Blackstone might have otherwise picked up for itself.
Unions infiltrated Amazon construction sites in Oregon and Washington seeking regulatory violations. On a frosty morning in February 2021, Tom Tanner walked into an under-construction Amazon warehouse in eastern Washington seeking work. Campaigns to organize Amazon warehouse workers have grabbed national headlines. Amazon workers at the LDJ5 Amazon Sort Center join a rally in support of the union on April 24 in Staten Island, New York. Wendell Jeffson in a boom lift at the Amazon warehouse in Shelby, Michigan, when he was 17.
Workers stand in line to cast ballots for a union election at Amazon's JFK8 distribution center, in the Staten Island borough of New York City, U.S. March 25, 2022. Amazon workers at a warehouse in Southern California have filed a petition to form a union with the National Labor Relations Board. Employees at the warehouse, located in Moreno Valley, California, are seeking to be represented by the Amazon Labor Union, a grassroots group of current and former Amazon workers that successfully unionized a Staten Island warehouse, referred to as JFK8, earlier this year. The move adds to a recent upswing of labor organizing among Amazon workers. Workers at a major Amazon air hub in nearby San Bernardino recently held walkouts to demand pay increases and highlight safety concerns.
A warehouse crush across the U.S. is squeezing out smaller companies as big retailers fill industrial storage sites with their growing stockpiles of inventory. Karen Galena, president of First Logistics, which has four warehouses in the Chicago area that provide space for retailers and manufacturers, said bigger customers are willing to pay higher prices for increasingly scarce storage space. “It’s tough for the small guy,” Ms. Galena said, noting labor and other costs are rising for warehouse operators. The challenges small businesses face finding warehouse space mirrors difficulties many had securing room on container ships earlier in the Covid-19 pandemic, when ocean carriers drove up rates and bumped smaller shippers to make way for larger clients. He said some companies are even generating revenue from unconventional storage space.
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