travisw
Well-Known Member
The road to hell is ofttimes paved with good intentions.
In San Francisco, popular restaurants Source, Abbot’s Cellar and Luna Park all closed their doors in recent months, citing the $15 minimum wage as the ultimate cause. Across the Bay in Oakland, which hiked the minimum wage to $12.25 earlier this year, 10 Chinatown restaurants and grocery stores have shuttered because of the wage increase.
http://www.miamiherald.com/opinion/op-ed/article34269492.html
Minimum wage effect? January to June job losses for Seattle area restaurants (-1,300) largest since Great Recession
https://www.aei.org/publication/min...staurants-1300-largest-since-great-recession/
San Francisco has 39.3 restaurants per 10,000 households. It's the highest per capita in the entire country. It has 50% more restaurants than the next highest city New York. There are quite literally thousands of them. If you add in the amount of restaurants and grocery stores in Oakland, the fact that 13 closed surely shouldn't scare anyone, much less mean that we're on the road to hell, should it?

