Dangerous heat wave during 'hot labor summer' — how picketing workers brave the sun

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LOS ANGELES, CA-JULY 13, 2023: Fast Food workers from across Los Angeles rally outside of the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce in Los Angeles. They are rallying to raise awareness of their push for better working conditions. (Mel Melcon / Los Angeles Times)
Los Angeles fast-food workers armed with umbrellas to shield themselves from the sun rallied on Thursday outside the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce. (Mel Melcon / Los Angeles Times)

It is shaping up to be a "hot labor summer" — literally.

As the region plunges into a record heat wave, Southern California workers across multiple industries are hitting steamy sidewalks and scorching asphalt to picket in front of iconic Los Angeles hotels, fast-food restaurants and major Hollywood studios — to name a few. It's sweat-inducing and so potentially dangerous that the Writers Guild of America canceled New York picketing during one of that region's hottest days last week.

For fast-food workers, the broiling conditions are nothing new. Protesting outside during a heat wave is even a welcome break for some. Those in hot restaurant kitchen facilities without adequate air conditioning are among workers least protected by California's heat safety standards — with state regulators sluggish to create new regulations that keep pace with accelerating climate change.

"You're joking right?" said Maria Liehr, 58, a Del Taco supervisor, when asked if the heat wave was a concern.

Church's Texas Chicken employee Rosaura Ramos had a similar reaction as she joined Liehr and about 100 other fast-food workers at a Thursday morning rally outside the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce in downtown Los Angeles.

"We work in a very hot area," said Ramos, 47. "We need to make more money."

Read more: Fast-food workers rally as California lawmakers hold controversial franchise liability bill

At 11 a.m. Thursday it was already 86 degrees. By 3 p.m., when fast-food workers staged a second protest outside a McDonald's in East L.A., the temperature had climbed to 92 degrees.

Workers in front of the McDonald's took shelter under black umbrellas stamped with “Fast food justice ahora!” Others sat using their hands to block the sun or scurried to the shade under the overhang of the McDonald's during lulls. A man began distributing water bottles to workers from the back of his truck.

On Friday, as actors, writers and others took to the streets with picket signs, it was even hotter. Labor leaders have dubbed this a season of labor solidarity under the rallying cry, "hot labor summer."

Striking Hollywood actors and screenwriters set up tents, layered in sweat-wicking clothing and donned sun visors. The heat did not seem to put a damper on turnout — bolstered by an influx of newly striking workers.

WGA members have been on strike since May 2, and on Friday they were joined by members of actors union SAG-AFTRA on the initial day of that strike, marking a historic converging of labor actions by the two unions — the first in 63 years.