Posted on Feb 6, 2021
Local Kroger Stores Close as California ‘Hero Pay’ Ordinance Backfires | Brad Polumbo
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Edited 4 y ago
Posted 4 y ago
Responses: 9
Just wait. The O'Biden administration wants to raise the minimum wage to $15 per hour. So of course businesses will either reduce the number of employees or be forced to shut down. Once again California leads the way.....to economic destruction.
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Lt Col Charlie Brown This story Has a lot going on. Certainly the Kroger company could afford to pay their employees more. Is it proper for the City Council to set wages though? Did the Council also raise the wages of their own employees first? I didn't see it in the text of the story. "Do as I say, not as I do" doesn't go very far when dealing with informed citizens. The Idealists of the council have in fact put more People out of work by trying to Demand something of a company that can afford to shutter stores. In business it comes down to profit, period. If the 2 stores were running on the edge of the profit line to begin with, and there are hundreds if not thousands of other stores around the country running comfortably in the black, Kroger doesn't care. The story doesn't mention if the stores were doing anything else special for the affected employees. To much going on, not enough info.
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SPC Michael Terrell
No, Kroger can't, for stores that aren't making enough to pay the overhead after the hike. Grocery stores operate on a very small profit margin, and wages are already one of the highest expenses. There is a point that it is cheaper just to shut down the store. Especially if the lease is about to run out.
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COL David Turk
Ralphs in California is usually unionized (don’t know those particular stores) which means their is a labor contract with the union in effect. That usually means any changes have to negotiated.
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