Obama, Unions, Trial Bar Take Aim At Franchise Model
by STEPHEN MOORE Posted 09/19/2014 08:02 AM ET
If the Obama Administration has its way, Ronald McDonald may
soon have to wipe that grin off his face as he stands beneath the Golden
Arches. One of the most successful models for expanding small-business
ownership in America is under full-scale attack from unions and the White
House.
The political strategy is to fundamentally change the legal
relationship between locally owned stores like McDonald's (NYSE:MCD), Popeyes
(NASDAQ:PLKI), Taco Bell (NYSE:YUM) and their multibillion-dollar parent
companies.
No longer would franchisees be legally classified as
independent contractors to the parent company. The left wants the employees of
each of the hundreds of thousands of independently owned franchise restaurants,
hotels, retail stores and others to be considered jointly employed by both the
independent franchisee and parent.
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This change would overturn a 30-year legal precedent for how
the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) deals with franchisees.
As of now, entrepreneurs can purchase and run their own
stores. Likewise, the parent company is sheltered from legal risks associated
with the actions on the part of the independent franchisees. Furthermore,
regulations such as ObamaCare that apply to large businesses do not affect
smaller franchise operations.
With this change, parent companies with deep pockets could
also be targets for shakedowns and lawsuits any time that there's a grievance
with a locally operated store.
Legal experts worry that the franchising model could become
extinct. The stakes are huge because by the end of this year, the more than
770,000 of these independently owned franchise stores nationwide are expected
to employ more than 8 million workers.
More than 31,000 automotive businesses, more than 155,000
fast-food restaurants and nearly 90,000 real estate businesses are part of this
model.
The first serious assault against franchising came in June,
when the city of Seattle, at the urging of the Service Employees International
Union, enacted a $15-an-hour minimum-wage law applying to businesses with more
than 500 employees.
The catch here is that the law applies to franchise
businesses if the parent company and all its stores employ more than 500
workers. So a local Wendy's (NASDAQ:WEN) restaurant with only 20 or 30
employees is considered a big business.
Venture capitalist Nick Hanauer, a member of the mayor's
minimum-wage committee, explained the reasoning in an email: "The truth is
that franchises like Subway and McDonald's really are not very good for our
local economy."
He blasted franchise agreements as "economically
extractive, civically corrosive and culturally dilutive."
Then in July, the franchise model took another hit when the
National Labor Relations Board's general counsel ruled that McDonald's. can be
held legally liable for labor violations because the parent company is a
"joint employer" in all its thousands of stores. If this rule, now
under legal challenge, were to stand, it would have huge consequences. The
parent company could be liable if a McDonald's store in, say, Rockford, Ill.,
violated overtime pay or workplace discrimination laws.
For the trial bar, this could be a godsend. The Erbe Law
Firm in Iowa, which follows this issue closely, reports that "since
November 2012, 181 complaints have been filed against McDonald's with the
NLRB."
The charges claim that McDonald's franchisees and McDonald's
U.S.A. violated the rights of employees as a result of activities surrounding
employee protests. The charges mostly have to do with the minimum-wage rallies
organized by local unions.
Meanwhile, the industry is fighting back in court with a
request for an injunction against the Seattle law.
Paul D. Clements, a former U.S. solicitor general now
representing the industry in this lawsuit, stated: "Seattle's new
minimum-wage law unconstitutionally discriminates against franchisees by
categorizing them as big businesses even when they are small and independently
owned." He calls the law "an unfair attack on small business owners
who happen to be franchisees."
Businesses claim that Seattle's law violates the
Constitution's interstate commerce clause because it imposes higher costs on
stores in Seattle that have out-of-state parent companies. The giant worry is
that Seattle's law could become a standard in other cities. It's also
challenging the NLRB ruling on joint ownership.
"The NLRB appears willing to ignore decades of settled
law in order to expand franchisor liability," complains American Tort
Reform Association spokesman Darren McKinney. These changes, he says, create
another opportunity "for the parasitic plaintiffs' bar to pick deep
corporate pockets of brand-name companies."
An added concern is that the NLRB ruling may require
fast-food companies to take on the near-impossible task of regulating and
monitoring the hiring practices of its thousands of franchisees.
Catherine Monson, CEO of Fastsigns International and a member
of the International Franchise Association (IFA) board of directors, warns that
the NLRB ruling makes no economic or legal sense because "the franchisor
plays no role in hiring, firing or directing the franchisee's employees."
The industry believes that if the unions and NLRB win in
court, the ObamaCare employer mandate law requiring firms with more than 50
employees to provide health insurance could now be applied to nearly every
fast-food and hotel chain in America. By some estimates, this requirement could
cut franchise store profits by as much as half.
This fight is sold as an attack against billion-dollar-plus
corporate chains like McDonald's and Burger King (NYSE:BKW). But the IFA notes
that most small fast-food stores have razor-thin profit margins. The average
store turns an annual profit of $50,000 to $100,000 on sales of $2 million to
$3 million. Some multiple-franchise owners get rich, but most do not. Tens of
thousands are minority-owned.
"The franchise relationship is a win-win for
everyone," says IFA President Stephen Caldeira."It helps
entrepreneurs by allowing them to own their own stores, it helps consumers by
holding prices down, and it helps the economy because these stores employ millions
of American workers."
Caldeira is confident that the courts will rule in favor of
established franchise law. But these days, with the courts packed with
Obama-appointed judges, there are no sure things.
Source: Moore is chief economist at the Heritage
Foundation.Read More At Investor's Business Daily: http://news.investors.com/091914-718136-small-business-franchise-model-under-fire.htm#ixzz3Dsj2Ob6U
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Comments
Now that Obama has snookered us into
squandering trillions to ‘redevelop’ our strip malls with bike lanes, a move
against the franchise industry could close down 50% of the customers who lease
these spaces. How’s that for a “transformation”? Muslim cuisine’ anyone ? You will have to
wear a burka and pray.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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