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Food service workers demonstrate for higher wages

USC food service workers claim they are earning less than $20,000, putting them below the poverty line.

LOS ANGELES — On Wednesday afternoon, USC Hospitality and Auxiliary Services workers held a protest on Childs Way near the Ronald Tutor Campus Center demanding higher wages. 

About 20 food service workers marched and chanted from noon until about 5 p.m.

This marks the first protest by USC workers in the spring semester. Though the workers conducted larger protests in 2014, this is the first demonstration on campus grounds.

The dialogue between the workers, represented by Unite Here Local 11 union, and the university began last summer.

“We have been negotiating since July but we have not reached an agreement,” said Maria Villalobos, a university food service worker. “Our lawyer and their lawyer have been in talks but we have not reached a deal.”

Villalobos, who has been a university employee for 42 years, explained that the protests have come after a series of unsuccessful meetings with the university. She explained how some of her colleagues have been suffering due to the low wages and limited hours allowed to work.

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