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NEW YORK — Fast-food labor organizers say they’re expanding the scope of their campaign for $15-an-hour wages and unionization, this time with a day of actions including other low-wage workers and demonstrations on college campuses.

Kendall Fells, organizing director for Fight for $15, said Tuesday the protests will take place April 15 and are planned to include actions on about 170 college campuses, as well as cities around the country and abroad.

At an event announcing the actions in front of a McDonald’s in New York City’s Times Square, organizers said home health care aides, airport workers, adjunct professors, child care workers and Walmart workers will be among those turning out in April.

Terrence Wise, a Burger King worker from Kansas City, Mo., and a national leader for the Fight for $15 push, said more than 2,000 groups including Jobs With Justice and the Center for Popular Democracy will show their support as well.

“This will be the biggest mobilization America has seen in decades,” Wise said at the rally as pedestrians walked past on the busy street.

The plans are a continuation of a campaign that began in late 2012. The push is being spearheaded by the Service Employees International Union and has included demonstrations nationwide to build public support for raising pay for fast-food and other low-wage workers, although turnout has varied from city to city. Last May, the campaign reached the doorsteps of McDonald’s headquarters in Oak Brook, Ill., where protesters were arrested after declining to leave the property before the company’s annual meeting.

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