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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe minimum wage fight: From San Francisco to de Blasio’s New York
The minimum wage fight: From San Francisco to de Blasios New York
By Ken Jacobs and Michael Reich
In his State of the Union address last month, President Barack Obama urged cities and states to bypass Congress and enact their own minimum wage increases...On Monday, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio followed the presidents advice. De Blasio announced, in his State of the City address, that he plans to ask Albany next week to give the city the power to raise the minimum wage...Cities across the country, from New York to Seattle, are moving aggressively to confront rising income inequality and falling real wages for low-paid workers. These cities can learn important lessons from San Franciscos bold experiments over the last 15 years.
San Francisco has now passed nearly a dozen laws to raise low-wage workers pay, expand access to health care and extend paid sick leave to every worker. These laws include living wage policies for workers at the San Francisco International Airport, on city economic-development projects and for city contractors; an across-the-board minimum wage now $10.74 an hour; a broad paid sick leave ordinance, and an employer healthcare requirement.
These laws have brought substantial improvements in compensation and access to healthcare for tens of thousands of low-wage workers and their families. Over the last decade, as real wages for low-paid workers stagnated and then declined nationally, San Francisco stood apart. Real wages rose for the lowest-paid workers and maintained their value because of indexing in the minimum wage law. During these 10 years, the minimum wage law alone has put an estimated $1.2 billion into workers pockets.
Two out of five San Francisco workers benefited from the paid sick-leave ordinance, using this access to paid leave to take care of their own or a family members health. Three-quarters of city employers expanded workers access to healthcare. Taken together, the laws bring the total minimum compensation for workers in large San Francisco firms to $13 an hour80 percent more than the federal minimum wage.
- more -
http://blogs.reuters.com/great-debate/2014/02/10/the-minimum-wage-fight-from-san-francisco-to-de-blasios-new-york/
By Ken Jacobs and Michael Reich
In his State of the Union address last month, President Barack Obama urged cities and states to bypass Congress and enact their own minimum wage increases...On Monday, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio followed the presidents advice. De Blasio announced, in his State of the City address, that he plans to ask Albany next week to give the city the power to raise the minimum wage...Cities across the country, from New York to Seattle, are moving aggressively to confront rising income inequality and falling real wages for low-paid workers. These cities can learn important lessons from San Franciscos bold experiments over the last 15 years.
San Francisco has now passed nearly a dozen laws to raise low-wage workers pay, expand access to health care and extend paid sick leave to every worker. These laws include living wage policies for workers at the San Francisco International Airport, on city economic-development projects and for city contractors; an across-the-board minimum wage now $10.74 an hour; a broad paid sick leave ordinance, and an employer healthcare requirement.
These laws have brought substantial improvements in compensation and access to healthcare for tens of thousands of low-wage workers and their families. Over the last decade, as real wages for low-paid workers stagnated and then declined nationally, San Francisco stood apart. Real wages rose for the lowest-paid workers and maintained their value because of indexing in the minimum wage law. During these 10 years, the minimum wage law alone has put an estimated $1.2 billion into workers pockets.
Two out of five San Francisco workers benefited from the paid sick-leave ordinance, using this access to paid leave to take care of their own or a family members health. Three-quarters of city employers expanded workers access to healthcare. Taken together, the laws bring the total minimum compensation for workers in large San Francisco firms to $13 an hour80 percent more than the federal minimum wage.
- more -
http://blogs.reuters.com/great-debate/2014/02/10/the-minimum-wage-fight-from-san-francisco-to-de-blasios-new-york/
NYT editorial: The Case for a Higher Minimum Wage
http://www.democraticunderground.com/10024473754
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The minimum wage fight: From San Francisco to de Blasio’s New York (Original Post)
ProSense
Feb 2014
OP
Laelth
(32,017 posts)1. k&r for labor. n/t
-Laelth
ProSense
(116,464 posts)2. Kick! n/t