Taco Bell doesn't pay overtime after 5 hours, Taco Bell is going to require weekends Taco Bell is not going to pay a new hire $31.00 per hour to work the day after Thanksgiving. Taco Bell does not have a senoirity list that will put you in line for a full-time $35-$40+ job. Not all 18-26 year olds are on their parents insurance and it is not free for the ones that are, many parttimers have kids and the benefits are the primary reason they are working there. There is no excuse for being a freeloading scab, none whatsoever. Dismissed!, Next case
You don't seem to understand that a union job is being compared to a non-union fastfood job. That means the union utterly failed at contract negotiations--best contract ever.
18-26 year old are on their parents insurance. Are there odd cases where they aren't: of course. Are they in the minority: yes. There is no cost difference to the parents that are paying for family plans in most cases. You don't get charged differently for 1 child or 3 children or 10 children in all cases but a few cheap employers.
Trying to act like health care is a major driving force behind a healthy 18 or early 20 something kid is also a joke. Most of those kids could eat a diet of sugar and caffeine and not see consequences for years.
You might dismiss it and want to say next...but the numbers at my center are multiplying with each hire. And seeing a market rate adjustment means even the long tenured union members are saying why am I paying union dues for that.
New hires know there is no future in driving with automated vehicles. And certainly not the rates of today's pay in those jobs. They make decent money per hour 1 day a year--the day after a holiday--when their workload and hours required to be there skyrockets....thanks for nothing.
So dismiss it all you want: the issue is clear and growing.
7 states became RTW after 1980. Right now there are 27 states that are RTW. With 2 of the last three doing so in the middle of traditionally union friendly states in the Midwest. And only 1 has ever repealed it: Missouri.
And Arizona currently has legislation in progress which will make it #28.