How I Get by - A Week in The Life of A McDonald's Cashier (1,2 Ns - Extract)

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How I Get By: A Week in the Life of a

McDonald’s Cashier
Cierra Brown is trying to do all she can on her own, but it rarely feels like
she’s doing enough.

December 5, 2019, 5:11pm

Cierra Brown estimates her commute to work would only take about 25
minutes if she had a car. That’s part of the reason she returned to
McDonald’s in January: Her car had broken down and she needed money.
But at McDonald’s, Brown only earns $9.50 per hour as a cashier, which
barely helps cover rent and is far from enough to solve her vehicular woes.
Without a car, one of Brown’s main headaches is getting to work. Her typical
bus commute to McDonald’s takes as long as two hours each way.
By the time she starts work, she’s already tired. When she gets home, she’s
exhausted.

“That is where a lot of my headache comes from,” she told VICE.

At 29, Brown works approximately 40 hours a week, splitting her time


between a McDonald’s in Durham, North Carolina, and a food-service gig a
local hospital. “It’s still not enough,” she said. Both jobs are part-time, and
she doesn’t receive health insurance through either employer. She can’t
afford insurance on her own, either. That’s a problem since Brown is
diabetic, and she has to pay for her medical expenses out of pocket. She’s
trying to do all she can on her own—she receives no food stamps or other
assistance, she notes—but it rarely feels like she’s doing enough.

“It’s really rough right now,” she said.

Returning to McDonald’s wasn’t an easy decision. The first time Brown left
McDonald’s in 2015, it was because she hadn’t received the raise and benefits
package she had been promised when she was promoted to assistant
certified swing manager, she said. She thought she was going to get a bump
to $11, some paid time off and health insurance.
“I never got it,” she said. So she quit.

Coming back has been difficult at times, which is part of the reason she
joined “Fight for $15 and a Union” a political movement that advocates for a
$15 minimum wage. The cause gives her some small semblance of hope.

This is what an average week for Brown looks like.

THURSDAY

Today was cold. My 30-minute walk to the bus stop felt farther than usual,
even though I walk this same route every day. I caught the 1:20 p.m. bus,
then switched buses, and got to work a few minutes before my 3:30 p.m.
shift at the hospital.

For the next four hours, I stand in one spot on a concrete floor working the
tray line. It’s like a constant assembly line, putting food on trays for
thousands of patients. I do milk, bread, butter, Ensure. Milk, bread, butter,
Ensure. A tray goes by every few seconds. Milk, bread, butter, Ensure. If I'm
slow, it backs up the line and it takes longer to finish. Standing in one place
so long makes my feet and my legs hurt. I know when I get up tomorrow, I
will wince when my feet touch the floor.

After work, I got a ride to the Fight for $15 and a Union office, just in time to
catch the last 20 minutes of our membership meeting. I got up and spoke
about the public hearing we’re planning for next month—a hearing for
workers like me to testify about the conditions we’re facing in Durham, N.C.

I joined the Fight for $15 and a Union because I’ve worked in the fast food
industry for 14 years—about half my life—and all these jobs have a few things
in common. They all paid poverty wages. None of these jobs have given me
the opportunity to come together with my coworkers in a union, or receive
any healthcare benefits. And the only way we'll create change in these jobs is
workers coming together and demanding it.

FRIDAY

The bus was late today, and it reminds me to get back to saving for a car. I
used to have one, but I couldn’t keep up with my car note or insurance with
my McDonald’s paycheck. I’ve been trying to save towards a car, but every
time I save money, I have to use it. It feels like I'm not getting anywhere. I
figure I need at least a $1,000 down payment. I had about $300 saved, but I
had to use it to get groceries, pay my phone bill, and get back, and forth to
work. So I’m back at zero.

I’m thinking about this while I deliver meal trays to patients. I pick up trays
from the basement level where we pack them, and take them to different
floors. I try to give every patient a little sunshine when I drop off their food,
anything I can do to make their day better. But I don’t have much time
because there are hundreds to deliver and I have to be quick.
SATURDAY

Working at McDonald’s today—running the cash register, cleaning up the


dining room, helping keep the kitchen running. I only get paid for one job,
but they ask me to do a little of everything.

I meant to pack a lunch and bring it with me, but I forgot. I try not to eat
McDonald’s food. I'm diabetic—I have to eat at regular times so I can take my
medicine and manage my diabetes. Neither of my jobs offer health
insurance, so I have to manage my health on my own.

It’s 8 p.m. and my scheduled shift is over, but they asked me to stay later—
probably till 10:30 or 11 p.m. I would like to tell them no, go home, eat dinner,
take my medicine and go to sleep. But I can’t do that. I know from
experience that if McDonald’s asks you to stay late, you better do it. If I say
no to extra hours, it’s likely that my next week’s hours will get cut or I’ll get
taken off the schedule for a while.

I end up staying until 11:15 p.m., when they say I can leave.

SUNDAY

The bus stops running at 10 p.m. on Sunday, but McDonald's asked me to


stay until close at 1 a.m. They asked me to stay because they need my help. I
know it’s going to be rough to find a way home, but I need the money so I
said yes.
Again, staying late is not mandatory but I know I might get punished for
saying no, so it's risky to not accept. And getting less hours at work would
mean that something is going to have to go lacking—like a bill that will have
to go unpaid. When you make $9.50/hour, you don’t have any wiggle room.

I get out at midnight and call three people for a ride, because there is no way
for me to walk home. The first three people don’t answer. I can’t blame
them, it’s late. In the end, Keanon, another Fight for $15 and a Union
member, comes to get me. I can count on other workers because they know
what I’m going through. In the Fight for $15, we have each others’ backs.

MONDAY

Mondays are paydays at McDonald's. Before I leave for my hospital job, I get
my McDonald’s paycheck. It's $215, for 2 weeks of work. I know I will be
broke by Wednesday.

First things first, I set aside $5 to pay back gas money for a friend who drove
me to work last week. I mentally put a little bit of this check in the “saving
for a car” fund. I set aside a chunk of this check for rent. I live with my
boyfriend John and his parents. John and I help around the house and we
pay rent every month. A couple years ago I had my own apartment, but the
cost of rent has gone up so much in Durham, and my paychecks are about
the same. I know a lot of other friends and workers who are living with
family or even in their cars. So it’s not just me who can’t afford to be
independent.
Then I go straight to the Dollar Tree and get the necessities: soap,
toothbrush, canned food, pads, tampons, hand soap, and a few other things.
It takes me a little while to decide whether I want to get my snack that I
really like—these crunchy popcorn chips—or do I get soap. I decide I need to
wash myself more than I need those chips!

My $215 check is lower than I expected. I thought my hours were going to


equal up to a little bit more, but my calculations were wrong. I feel like I’m
not progressing—I'm not able to do anything beyond my basic needs. And I
know I’m not the only one struggling with these poverty wages—this is why
we fight!

TUESDAY

The hospital tray line was moving fast today. There's another worker who is
pregnant and approaching her due date. I kept my eye on her as she worked
a few spots down from me. She was picking up metal pallets that we use to
keep the food warm, and bending down to pick up plastic utensils from the
bottom shelf. I jumped in and helped her as often as I could, getting things
from the low shelves so she didn’t have to keep bending. I tried to help her
as much as I could.

She says she plans to work for as long as possible, trying to provide for her
baby. As part time employees, we don’t get health insurance or paid sick
days. She’s excited to become a mom, and I’m happy for her. We're good
coworkers—work friends, you could say.
WEDNESDAY

I’m on the bus to my hospital job when I get a call from McDonald’s—they
want me to come in today. So after I finish my shift at the hospital, I figure
out the bus schedule to get from job A to job B. By the time I get home
tonight, I will have spent almost 5 hours on the bus.

McDonald’s is a little short-staffed tonight, so I’m busy. I take orders at the


cash register and keep a smile on my face no matter what comes at me. I’m
good at being friendly even when I’m tired, because I actually like our
customers. Most of the people who eat at McDonald’s are working at jobs
that pay less than $15/hour. And here in North Carolina, it’s a safe bet that
they don’t have union protection at work. So when I’m fighting for $15 and
union rights for all workers, I’m doing it for them too. Since I became a
leader in the Fight for $15 and a Union, whenever I meet a worker I see
someone who could join our fight.

When I finally get home most of the house is asleep, but John is waiting up
for me. We cook dinner—chicken and a bag of frozen mixed veggies with a
little soy sauce. We eat together and talk about our days. We talk about bills
and how we're going to cover the next week. He makes me laugh and we
watch TV until I fall asleep on the couch.

THURSDAY
I’m preparing meal trays for patients at the hospital and the day is speeding
by because I’m excited for what comes next. Later today I’m going to a Fight
for $15 and a Union leadership retreat.

I get to the retreat a little late because I couldn’t take off work. Other
worker-leaders are sitting in a circle talking about lessons from past social
movements—the Civil Rights movement, Dr. King’s Poor People’s Campaign.
They widen the circle for me and I jump into the discussion. This fight for
workers’ dignity is not new—it’s something that’s been going on for decades.
It feels good to be talking about big ideas after packing hospital meals for
hours.

I share about my daily struggle—working since age 14, often having to rely on
food stamps while working full time for McDonald’s, no health insurance,
always worried about making ends meet. There’s no way for me to face
these realities without the Fight for $15 and a Union—it’s helped me find my
voice.

In one of the sessions we talk about hope. This movement gives me hope,
but we still have a lot to do—we haven’t won a $15 minimum wage here in
the South yet, and we need to make McDonald’s hear our demand for a seat
at the table. When I talk to other workers I tell them: We need more chances
to come together in unions because we need each other.
Our workshops run late into the night because we want to keep talking and
planning. Everything that I learned here today, I won’t forget. But I have to
get some sleep—tomorrow is another work day.

Source: https://www.vice.com/en/article/zmjjnj/how-i-get-by-a-week-in-the-life-of-a-
mcdonalds-cashier

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