Business California Pizza Hut Lays Off Every Delivery Driver as Wages Rise to $20 - No one outwagies the hut!

Multiple Pizza Hut franchises in California, collectively operating hundreds of stores, are laying off 1,200 in-house delivery drivers ahead of a new law taking effect in April that raises wages to $20 per hour

PacPizza LLC, operating as Pizza Hut, said in a federal WARN (Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification) Act notice filed with California's Employment Development Department that the company has made a business decision to eliminate first-party delivery services and, as a result, the elimination of all delivery driver positions. Similarly, Southern California Pizza Co. has also announced layoffs, impacting about 841 drivers across the state.

For the affected delivery drivers—some of which Newsweek has reached out to via social media channels—the change comes as a shock, with many expressing dismay over the severance offers and the timing of the layoffs.

The drivers, who now face the reality of unemployment in the coming year, have voiced concerns about the impact on their livelihoods and the broader implications for workers in similar positions.

One driver, who had been working for Pizza Hut for nine years, anonymously spoke to Business Insider and said that he was offered $400 severance if he stayed on staff until his February 5 layoff date.

The current minimum wage in California is $16 per hour and will increase to $20 in April. The move by the Pizza Hut operators is representative of broader adjustments within the fast-food industry in response to the new labor law, AB 1228, replacing the controversial FAST Act.

While the law aims to elevate the earnings of fast-food workers, it has sparked varied reactions from within the industry, prompting many restaurant operators outside of Pizza Hut to push for a referendum while they reevaluate their business models.

In the context of the Pizza Hut layoffs, the California franchises and its customers will rely on third-party delivery apps like Uber Eats, GrubHub and DoorDash for deliveries.

Newsweek has reached out to PacPizza LLC as well as Southern California Pizza Co. LLC via email for comment.

Pizza Hut, part of publicly traded company Yum! Brands, Inc., which owns brands like KFC and Taco Bell, acknowledged the recent changes in delivery services at some franchise restaurants, saying that its franchisees independently own and operate their establishments, and adhere to local market dynamics while complying with federal, state and local regulations.

 
Oh look, fast food companies are doing exactly what people thought they would do if the minimum wage got jacked up. Color me surprised.
The progressive way is to dream up a utopia, make it illegal to resist, then just hope everything falls neatly into place without you having to put any effort into it.

Then when everything goes horribly wrong, blame fascism.
 
That's right, wagie.
grubhub-dance.gif
Dance for my amusement
 
If $20 is minimum wage, California must be CRAZY expensive. I'd think that delivery drivers would get paid slightly more since they're using their own vehicle to do their job beyond job transportation.
I don't live in California but I've stayed there off and on for work a while back. Shit is outrageously expensive everywhere, especially gasoline.
 
I'll never push "the button" that makes a person unemployed.

But, when they push it themselves? Ignoring the obvious business reality that we all saw and warned them about? That their demanding high wages for unskilled entry-level jobs will result in the jobs being eliminated?

Very little sympathy.

Everyone not a starry-eyed Junior Communist or believer in CA-style hyperliberalism (the same thing, really) saw this coming a mile away.
 
It's up there, but, my first go-to is probably always gonna be Papa John's if it's an option where I happen to be. The hut was always juuuuuuuuuuuuuuuust a bit too on the greasy side for me.
In all seriousness, if California doesn't turn into a food desert in 10 years, nobody will learn a damn thing.
 
Pizza Hut is better than any fast food pizza brand out there.

I will fight anybody who disagrees.

Pizza Hut seems like an empire in full retreat.

Drove past locations that had been turned into cannabis stores and pool vendors in the past few days.

I don't know what it says about your chain when a swimming pool installer thinks they have a better go of it when summer lasts here for all of six weeks.
 
In all seriousness, if California doesn't turn into a food desert in 10 years, nobody will learn a damn thing.
California NEVER learns a damn thing, Democrats run the whole state with 99.9% efficency and they STILL can't admit their ideas don't work because they're bad ideas, it's that 00.1% of damn dirty Trolls in the populace that's to blame..... they are a literal failed state.
 
Back