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GOP legislators attempt to undercut WA voters on minimum wage law

1433 county resultsIn November, Washington voters approved Initiative 1433 to raise the state minimum wage to $11 per hour ($13.50 by 2020) and allow all workers to earn some paid sick and safe leave. Republican legislators and business groups opposed I-1433. They argued that it would hurt businesses, teenagers, nonprofits, rural counties…you name it. Voters rejected those arguments and overwhelmingly approved I-1433 by a 15-point margin.

Less than three months later, Republicans in Olympia are trying to undermine I-1433 by exempting teenagers, nonprofits — and not just rural counties, but every county in the state except King County. These bills are scheduled for Senate committee hearings this Thursday (Feb. 2) at 1:30 p.m.:

SUB-MINIMUM WAGE FOR TEENAGERSThis draft bill (S-1027.1) SB 5541 would allow employers to pay 85 percent of the minimum wage to 16- and 17-year-olds. Current law says only 14- and 15-year-olds can be paid this sub-minimum wage. (See Washington State Labor Council President Jeff Johnson’s column explaining why this is a bad idea.)

EXEMPTING ALL NONPROFIT CORPORATIONSSB 5532 would exclude all nonprofits from the minimum wage and sick leave provisions of I-1433. This wouldn’t just exempt a handful of small charities, it would exempt more than 50,000 corporations and hundreds of thousands of workers at some of Washington’s biggest employers like Providence and MultiCare health facilities.

EXEMPTING MOST OF WASHINGTONSB 5530 would immediately cut the $11 minimum wage back to $9.53 per hour and deny workers the opportunity to earn paid sick leave in every county except King County. It would be as if I-1433 was never approved in the rest of Washington. (Fun fact: even if you threw out every vote cast in King County, I-1433 still passed.)

These proposals ignore the will of the people, who already heard and rejected arguments for exempting certain workers. They undermine the whole point of I-1433, which is to make Washington a better and healthier place to live and work. All of Washington. Not just King County.

If you are coming to Olympia for the WSLC Legislative Reception and Lobbying Day that begins this Thursday, Feb. 2, come early and attend these bills’ hearings at 1:30 p.m. in the Senate Commerce, Labor & Sports Committee.

Original: Washington State Labor Council »

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