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California’s ‘groundbreaking’ fast food council lacks a leader, hasn’t met in over a year

The council was created as part of a 2023 compromise that also set a $20 minimum wage for fast food workers. It has the power to set standards on wages, health, safety and working conditions — and to raise the minimum wage annually for hundreds of thousands of fast food workers at chains with 60 or more locations nationwide.

The council — composed of four members representing the businesses, four members representing labor and a chairperson who’s an “unaffiliated” member of the public — must, under state law, hold at least two meetings a year, though the law does not specify who should enforce this provision.

The council only held those meetings in 2024; last year it held two subcommittee meetings, the latest in February 2025. Shortly after, the council’s chairperson, Nick Hardeman, resigned when Newsom appointed him to a different state position. When reached by CalMatters, Hardeman said he did not want to speak on the record about a council he has not chaired in a while.

California’s ‘groundbreaking’ fast food council lacks a leader, hasn’t met in over a yearhttps://calmatters.org/economy/2026/05/fast-food-council-no-chairperson/?link_source=ta_bluesky_link&taid=b1fa75f5-a39a-4d90-b5ca-1676bd5d01b1Open linkView original on lemmy.world
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California’s ‘groundbreaking’ fast food council lacks a leader, hasn’t met in over a year | Spyke