The New York attorney general’s office is looking into reports of wage theft violations within the state’s fast food industry, department officials confirmed on Thursday. The news of their investigation broke on the same day that Fast Food Forward, a workers’ group dedicated to organizing New York fast food workers, released a report alleging widespread wage theft within the industry.
“The findings in this report are deeply troubling and shed light on potentially broad labor violations by the fast food industry, which employs thousands of New Yorkers,” said Damien LaVera, a spokesperson for New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman, in a statement. He said that fast food workers who had experienced wage theft could contact the office’s Labor Bureau or fill out a complaint form available on the department’s website.
State officials would not say which specific companies were under investigation, but subpoenas had been sent out to several franchisees and one parent company.
The Fast Food Forward report is based on a survey of 500 New York City-based fast food workers which was conducted by the progressive polling firm Anzalon Liszt Research. As many as 84% of the surveyed workers reported that their employers had committed at least one form of wage theft in the past year. Forms of wage theft include unpaid overtime and the withholding of legally required meal breaks.









