Denny's to charge 5% 'Obamacare surcharge' and cut employee hours to deal with cost of legislation
By
James Nye
PUBLISHED:
00:59 EST, 15 November 2012
|
UPDATED:
01:33 EST, 15 November 2012
President Obama's election victory ensured his Affordable Care Act would
remain the centerpiece of his first term in power - but that has left
some business owners baulking at the extra cost Obamcare will bring.
Florida
based restaurant boss John Metz, who runs approximately 40 Denny's and
owns the Hurricane Grill & Wings franchise has decided to offset
that by adding a five percent surcharge to customers' bills and will
reduce his employees' hours.
With
Obamacare due to be fully implemented in January 2014, Metz has
justified his move by claiming it is 'the only alternative. I've got to
pass on the cost to the customer.'
A Florida restaurant owner who runs 40
franchises of the Denny's restaurant chain has threatened to add a five
percent surcharge to customers bills in an effort to combat Obamacare
The fast-food business owner is
set to hold meetings at his restaurants in December where he will tell
employees, 'that because of Obamacare, we are going to be cutting
front-of-the-house employees to under 30 hours, effective Here are the consequences of h Obamacare we've been warning about. I've point out before that there is no such thing as a business tax, and here it is in black and white. Democrats tax YOU everytime they claim to go after the rich in class warfare.
immediately.'
More...
Claiming that he is not anti-insurance Metz has said that he understands the problems this will cause for his employees.
John Metz also owns Hurricane Grill & Wings
which has 48 franchises around the country and falls under the umbrella
of his firm RREMC Restaurants
'I think it's a terrible thing.
It's ridiculous that the maximum hours we can give people is 28 hours a
week instead of 40,' said Metz to the Huffington Post.
'It's going to force my employees to go out and get a second job.'
Obamacare requires businesses or franchises with more
than 50 workers must offer an approved insurance plan or pay a penalty
of $2,000 for each full-time worker over 30 workers.
The program mandates that only
employees working more than 30 hours a week are covered under their
employers health insurance plan, chains like Olive Garden and Red
Lobster are already considering reduced worker hours.
'Obviously, I'd love to cover all our employees under that insurance,' said Metz.
'But
to pay $5,000 per employee would cost us $175,000 per restaurant and
unfortunately, most of our restaurants don't make $175,000 a year. I
can't afford it.'
Obamacare supporters and protesters gather in
front of the U.S. Supreme Court to find out the ruling on the Affordable
Health Act June 28, 2012 - the Court upheld the controversial
legislation
Several other restaurants
including Papa John's, Apple Metro and Jimmy John's have announced plans
to skirt Obamacare by reducing employees hours to make them part-time.
Indeed,
Metz is adding the surcharge because he believes that eventually firms
will be fined for not covering staff who complete over 30-hours in a
week,
In November, a
poll for Kaiser Health Tracking found that 43 percent of the United
States had a favourable opinion of Obamcare, while 39-percent had an
unfavourable one.
'Instead
of indirectly charging customers by raising prices, he is directly
charging and making a political statement,' said Paul Fronstin, director
of the health research program at the Employee Benefit Research
Institute in Washington.
Here to stay: President Barack Obama's landmark health care legislation has been cemented into law by his re-election
'Potentially 43 percent of this
person's customers may find the explicit charge a turnoff, and vote
with their feet and their money and choose not to eat there.'
Despite this, Metz has admitted he is willing to take the heat should the decision backfire on him.
'We're
trying to get more restaurant operators rallied around the concept of
adding a 5 percent surcharge to their bill to cover the costs of
Obamacare as opposed to raising prices,' he said.
Earlier this week Papa John's CEO John Schnatter told shareholders in a conference call this week that
Obamacare would cost the company 11 to 14 cents per pizza, a cost that would be
passed on to customers.
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