San Francisco Chronicle

Protest at McDonald’s over harassment complaints.

Employees allege sexual harassment unpunished Protest organizers said the chain’s employees have been subjected to explicit sexual remarks, groping and being rubbed up against while at work.

- By Michael Cabanatuan

Tuesday’s lunchtime crowd at the McDonald’s in San Francisco’s Mission District clustered outside the front door, but people weren’t dining al fresco or happily waiting in line for a meal.

About 60 protesters, some of them McDonald’s employees, gathered to chant, wave signs and deliver speeches as part of a national action campaign to protest what they consider the fast-food giant’s inadequate response to sexual harassment complaints from workers.

Protests — publicized in advance as strikes — took place in 10 cities around the country, but nobody walked off the job at the Mission District restaurant, which organizers chose for its central location. A handful of protesters did wear McDonald’s uniforms.

Fight for $15, which organized Tuesday’s protest and aims to unionize fast-food workers and raise the national minimum wage, took up the issue of sexual harassment mostly on behalf of female fast-food workers, organizers said. As the world’s largest fast-food chain, McDonald’s has become a major target.

Protest organizers said the chain’s employees have been subjected to explicit sexual remarks, groping and being rubbed up against, while others have been propositio­ned by co-workers on the job. Complaints, they said, are ignored or result in retaliatio­n such as reassignme­nt to undesirabl­e shifts or having their hours reduced.

In May, a group of female workers — one just 15 years old — filed sexual harassment complaints

against McDonald’s. Many of the strikes Tuesday took place in cities where workers filed complaints.

In addition to San Francisco, protests took place in Chicago; Durham, N.C.; Kansas City, Mo.; Los Angeles; Miami; Milwaukee; New Orleans; Orlando, Fla.; and St. Louis.

While there were no San Francisco strikers at the Mission McDonald’s, a handful of protesters identified themselves as employees and wore the chain’s gray T-shirts with the familiar arch logo.

Among them was Carole Brannock, 49, who works customer service at a Sacramento McDonald’s where she said she was assaulted by a male customer in February while she was cleaning a restroom. Brannock fought off her attacker with a broom, she said, but she was discourage­d from reporting the crime or from speaking about it with co-workers.

She loves her job, she said, but she can’t forget the attack and plans to find new employment.

“I look at life differentl­y now,” Brannock said. “I can’t be in a public restroom without flinching, wondering if it’s a man or a woman coming in and what’s going on.”

Fight for $15 officials said the strikers are demanding McDonald’s improve its process for responding to harassment complaints, require anti-harassment training for employees — including managers — and create a national committee that includes workers to address sexual harassment.

McDonald’s did not respond to The Chronicle’s requests for comment, but the company defended its anti-harassment efforts in an email to the Associated Press.

 ??  ??
 ?? Photos by Liz Hafalia / The Chronicle ?? Protesters, including Xiumin Li (middle) and Sita Stukes (right), march to a McDonald’s in the Mission.
Photos by Liz Hafalia / The Chronicle Protesters, including Xiumin Li (middle) and Sita Stukes (right), march to a McDonald’s in the Mission.
 ??  ?? A crowd at a McDonald’s at Mission and 24th streets in San Francisco protests what they say is the company’s poor response to sexual harassment at work.
A crowd at a McDonald’s at Mission and 24th streets in San Francisco protests what they say is the company’s poor response to sexual harassment at work.
 ?? Photos by Liz Hafalia / The Chronicle ?? McDonald’s customer service employee Carole Brannock, who said she was assaulted while working in Sacramento, joins the protest at a Mission McDonald’s.
Photos by Liz Hafalia / The Chronicle McDonald’s customer service employee Carole Brannock, who said she was assaulted while working in Sacramento, joins the protest at a Mission McDonald’s.
 ??  ?? Maria Maldonado of Fight for $15 talks to supporters before the San Francisco protest. People in 10 U.S. cities rallied against the fast-food giant’s response to sexual harassment claims.
Maria Maldonado of Fight for $15 talks to supporters before the San Francisco protest. People in 10 U.S. cities rallied against the fast-food giant’s response to sexual harassment claims.

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