Seattle just passed a $15 minimum wage bill, and San Francisco will vote on one in November. It's a hot topic among lawmakers around the country, and business owners are concerned.
Mike Stygles, 44, owns three Melting Pot restaurants and one Burger 21 franchise.
Stygles said a $15 minimum wage would give him roughly three choices: close some restaurants, cut hours orpass costs on to the consumer. Depending on how an increase was enacted, he might have to do all three at once.
He is concerned about his ability to properly staff his restaurants, where the the profit margin is usually 10% at most.
Stygles said he might have to consider a new business model that would allow customers to order from iPads at their tables, which is already being done at some restaurants around the country.