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Letters to the Editor: Upset over California’s $20 wage? Wait until you see what fast-food CEOs make

A McDonald's sign from below.
Readers weigh in on higher fast-food wages.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
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To the editor: In 2022, Chipotle’s chief executive received bonus pay worth nearly twice his annual salary. The chief executive of McDonald’s Corp.’s total compensation was more than $17 million. (“With fewer options, South L.A. braces for bigger bills at fast-food restaurants,” March 29)

These CEOs are not skimping and scraping by. We should be asking why they’re not cutting back on these exorbitant bonuses to help pay their workers a livable wage instead of passing the buck to customers or threatening to cut staff.

Sulymon Siddiq, Riverside

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To the editor: Have any of you been in a grocery store lately? And I am not talking about Erewhon. Just your run-of-the-mill Vons or Stater Bros.

It’s negligent — even for researchers — to continue talking about grocery stores having “affordable” healthy food options. They don’t.

You can ask a few dozen of your friends who are lucky enough to make a high salary and live where there are a lot of grocers nearby, and most of them will tell you that shopping for groceries — healthy or not — is not “affordable” anymore.

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Big-box grocers are inflating prices to keep their profits soaring. The idea that a supermarket is where you go for healthy, affordable food is fast becoming a myth.

Lynn Balsamo, Santa Monica

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To the editor: Fast-food workers earn every penny of their new $20 minimum wage. Their wages go right back into our economy to provide food, housing and healthcare to many of our most vulnerable neighbors.

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The rising tide lifts all boats.

Justin Massey, Hermosa Beach

The writer is mayor of Hermosa Beach.

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