This Obscure Legal Dispute Could Cost McDonald's And Other Fast-Food Companies Billions Of Dollars
mcdonald's strike workers
mcdonald's strike workers

REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson Workers protest McDonald's in hopes of earning a living wage.

The fast-food franchise model is under attack, and the culprit is an under-the-radar legal dispute currently being considered by the National Labor Relations Board.

Though the case itself is relatively mundane, the outcome could set a precedent that would make fast-food chains legally responsible for workers who had previously been the liability of their franchisees.

Experts say that such a ruling could cost the fast-food industry billions of dollars and alter the power dynamic in a long-running struggle between McDonald's and its workers.

The case revolves around whether the court will overturn a 30-year-old legal ruling that says companies can't be held liable for unfair employment practices toward workers that the company is not directly in charge of hiring and firing — including the nearly 8 million American workers employed by franchise businesses ranging from car dealerships to restaurants.

While it might say McDonald's, Burger King, or Taco Bell on their name tags, the overwhelming majority of workers at these chains are actually hired and fired by franchisees — independent business owners who pay the franchiser a fee in exchange for the rights to use their recipes, food supplies, business model, and marketing materials.

In the case at hand — between the waste-management company Browning-Ferris Industries and the Teamsters, a US labor union with 1.4 million members — the NLRB very well could issue a ruling that fast-food industry groups fear would make McDonald's and other chains more vulnerable to unionization and damage the appeal of franchising.

"This could blow up the franchise model," says Michael J. Lotito, an attorney who represents the industry group The International Franchise Association (IFA). "This is a huge potential business threat because historically, there's never been a question that the employees belong to the franchisee and not the franchiser."

Ronald McDonald arrested
Ronald McDonald arrested

Andrew Burton/Getty Images Ronald McDonald gets "arrested" during a protest in March.

The case poses such a threat to fast-food companies (as well as companies in other industries) because of a decision made in May by the NLRB, a panel of five presidential appointees that rules on important cases about how unions, workers, and employers can interact with one another.

It was then that the judges said they would not rule only on the Teamsters' request to unionize workers at a Browning-Ferris recycling plant in California, but that they would also decide whether to keep or change the entire legal standard they had been using to determine whether a company would be legally responsible for a given worker.