I'm sure this will have a profound impact on Cast Members and make them forget that they are overworked, undervalued and ready to be dropped as soon as the going gets rough.
Like every other job in the service industry going back decades. I worked 3 jobs most of the time. My motivation was upgrading my 15 inch black and white TV and maybe eventually getting cable.
I recognized I was unskilled and that was all I was qualified for. I also realized if I got a foot in the door, I was going to outperform most others and move up, which I always did.
I lived within my means as best I could, and did my best until I got into management. *Once you build your resume with relevant experience* you may qualify for a better job and not have to work 2 or 3.
Finally, 20 years ago I turned a side hustle into my own business, but that’s just started to really pay off in the last couple of years. I still work the equivalent of 2-3 jobs, but it’s for myself. With that many hours put in, I was not making $15 an hour many of those years - and I’m the owner.
When I was in retail management, I didn’t make more than $40K in the late 90’s in NJ. I did better (more like $40 an hour) bartending in Florida - though again, had to start out with crummy shifts and work my way up. That’s how it works. Nobody owes you anything but what you agreed to take as pay when you got hired.
I think the point is more that we shouldn't expect people to wear out their bodies for less than living wages.
That’s why hopefully we have those jobs in our 20’s. By our 30’s, we should be on the way up.
If you want more money per hour, it likely won’t be at a job you can learn in an hour. Improve yourself. Go to school. Yes, nights if need be. Invest in yourself. Take an entry level part time job in the field you hope to work full time later. Get a tipped job (they’re usually better paying than cashier jobs.) If you want Google-level perks, put in the effort to make yourself worth something to Google. Don’t expect it from Walmart (or Disney, for that matter, unless you’re in corporate.) Become a doctor, lawyer, architect. Or start your own business. Mine started with a $10 investment and has been a very slow burn.
This is life. This is reality. Not everyone gets a trophy. And a “living wage” has nothing to do with what a job (not a person, a job) is “worth.”