'I feel duped': Inside the fast-food industry's push to dismantle a new California labor law

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Susan Bushnell was in a hurry when a man, clipboard in hand, approached her outside a Walmart. The man asked her to sign a petition, saying it would help to raise wages for fast-food workers in California. But what the man told Bushnell was false.

Bryan Culbertson, who said he was lied to by a circulator at the Oakland farmers market, said he found it difficult to find clear information online about how to withdraw his signature.

Although some people interviewed by The Times ultimately declined to sign the AB 257 referendum petition, seven voters realized they had signed in error.California’s election code makes it a crime for proponents of a proposed ballot measure and those whom they hire to engage in any tactic that “intentionally misrepresents or intentionally makes any false statement concerning the contents, purport or effect of the petition.

After some prodding, Covarrubias said, the circulator admitted he was falsifying California addresses; he had asked students to leave the address line blank.A spokesperson for the International Franchise Assn., one of the groups spearheading the referendum campaign, pointed to safeguards built into the process.

Political campaigns, the firms they hire to circulate petitions and the signature gatherers seldom face consequences for bad behavior.The political firms hired by campaigns typically create shell companies, resulting in a confusing network of entities that makes regulatory oversight challenging.

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I guess their parents never taught them to READ something before you sign it. So now it will go to a popular vote (democracy) for the citizens to decide rather than a select few politicians to decide

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