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McDonald's workers in 19 cities file complaints over workplace hazards

McDonald's workers in 19 cities have filed complaints over burns from popping grease, a lack of protective equipment and other workplace hazards, according to labour organizers.

Lack of protective equipment, popping grease and other hazards cited

McDonald's workers in 19 cities have filed complaints over burns from popping grease, a lack of protective equipment and other workplace hazards, according to labour organizers.

The complaints are the latest move in an ongoing campaign to win pay of $15 an hour and unionization for fast-food workers by publicly pressuring McDonald's to come to the bargaining table. The push is being spearheaded by the Service Employees International Union and began more than two years ago. Already, it has included protests around the country and lawsuits alleging workers weren't given their rightful pay.

The burns and other hazards were detailed in complaints announced Monday and filed with U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration in recent weeks. Workers cite a persistent lack of gloves for handling hot equipment and say they're been burned while cleaning grills that have to be kept on. They also detail a lack of training for handling hot fryers and slipping on wet floors.

No comment from government

A representative for the Labor Department, Laura McGinnis, confirmed the complaints were received by OSHA but said the agency does not discuss ongoing investigations.

In a statement, McDonald's Corp. said its franchisees are committed to providing safe working conditions for employees, and the company will review the allegations. "It is important to note that these complaints are part of a larger strategy orchestrated by activists targeting our brand and designed to generate media coverage," Heidi Barker Sa Shekhem, a McDonald's spokeswoman, said in the statement.

The complaints extend a central theme of the "Fight for $15" campaign, which has been to hold McDonald's accountable for working conditions at its franchised locations. That would ease the way for worker negotiations and unionization across the company's more than 14,000 U.S. restaurants, the vast majority of which are run by franchisees. McDonald's and other fast-food chains, including Burger King and Wendy's, have said they're not responsible for employment decisions at franchised restaurants.

The matter has reached the general counsel of the National Labor Relations Board, which said late last year that McDonald's could be named as a joint employer in complaints by workers. The complaints have yet to be heard, but whichever side loses is expected to appeal the decision.

As with low wages and labour violations, organizers say McDonald's should be held responsible for safety standards at franchised restaurants as well.

Kendall Fells, organizing director for Fight for $15, said the injuries at both franchised and company-owned restaurants were primarily the result of understaffing and employees being told to work too quickly both of which he said were the result of a computer system that tracks sales and staffing metrics.

The computer system was also cited in lawsuits last year that allege "wage theft" by McDonald's and its franchisees for the denial of breaks and overtime pay. That system has been key in the argument by labour groups that McDonald's exerts enough control over franchised restaurants to be considered a joint employer.

Fells noted that workers are looking at every way they can hold McDonald's accountable, and that workplace injuries are just the latest issue they're bringing to light.

Randy Rabinowitz, a health and safety legal expert who was hired by the Fight for $15 campaign, said the first onsite visits by OSHA triggered by the complaints took place in the past week or so, and that the agency has six months to issue citations.

She said there have been other cases where multiple employers are issued citations for the same violations, but that she's not aware of any such cases involving fast-food restaurants.

Although the complaints were filed in different regional OSHA offices, Rabinowitz said she expects the various offices to talk to each other so they have a consistent approach to the complaints