National Post

Ontario takes to road for hearings on $15/hour wage

- Allison Jones

• Ontario’s bid to raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour — a move that is feared by businesses but has the support of some prominent economists — is being put to the public this week.

The Liberal government’s proposed l egislation on labour reforms, which also includes equal pay for parttime workers, increased vacation entitlemen­ts and expanded personal emergency leave, starts committee hearings Monday that will travel the province.

The bill would boost the minimum wage, which is currently set to rise with inflation from $ 11.40 an hour to $ 11.60 in October, up to $ 14 on Jan. 1, 2018, and $ 15 the following year.

Businesses are strongly opposed to the increase, particular­ly the quick pace of it. A coalition of groups including the Ontario Chamber of Commerce, Restaurant­s Canada and the Canadian Franchise Associatio­n are sending Premier Kathleen Wynne a letter Monday, slamming the “arbitrary” increase.

“Many Ontario employers, especially small businesses, are now considerin­g closing their business because they do not have the capacity to successful­ly manage such reforms,” they write.

“The business community was wholly aligned with your government’s previous approach, which allowed for increases to the minimum wage that were predictabl­e and protected against arbitrary political decision-making.”

Business groups had been calling for the government to first perform an economic analysis, and have now commission­ed their own, which the coalition said will be complete next month.

“To plan effectivel­y and protect jobs, employers need predictabi­lity and time to adjust the cost of other inputs where we can,” the coalition writes. “There is no way to absorb and adjust to a 32-per-cent hit in less than 18 months.”

Karl Wirtz, the CEO and founder of a packaging company i n Brampton, Ont., said he may have to consider bankruptcy.

“This is something that has got me scared out of my mind,” he said.

The minimum wage increase will mean an extra $1 million for WG Pro-Manufactur­ing’s 200 — soon to be 245 — employees, Wirtz said. About half of them make minimum wage and the rest will have to get commensura­te pay bumps, he said.

The company, which does co- packaging for foods and confection­ary products, is focused on growth, Wirtz said, and as such is operating within tight margins. He hasn’t budgeted for an extra million dollars a year and is locked into contracts with big customers. The only way he sees out of the pricing structure is bankruptcy.

“I want all of our workers to have a good income and good ability to have a good lifestyle,” Wirtz said. “I respect that. Truthfully, I do. But you have to give businesses an opportunit­y to phase it into their program. So yes, let’s shoot for $ 14, let’s shoot for $15, but scale it over the next coming years.”

Economic Developmen­t Minister Brad Duguid said the government is sensitive to the needs of businesses, smaller ones in particular.

“We want to ensure there’s not unintended c onsequence­s, because these are complex policies,” he said.

“If there’s more work to be done in terms of the details and potential unintended consequenc­es, that’s something we’re certainly happy to do with our business community.”

A recent study out of Seattle made headlines for concluding that its minimum wage increase was actually detrimenta­l to low- income workers. But its methodolog­y has been criticized and it bucks the trend of similar studies concluding the opposite, noted Canadian economist Lars Osberg.

He is one of 50 economists in Canada who just signed a letter in support of a $ 15 minimum wage.

“For many years, many in the economics profession were also very concerned about this possibilit­y of disemploym­ent of people with minimum- wage jobs,” said Osberg, an economics professor at Dalhousie University.

“A whole raft of new studies in the last 20 years have indicated that disemploym­ent effect is very small ... On average you could say it’s small to negligible.”

While businesses’ concerns are understand­able, he said, studies show that increasing the minimum wage increases people’s purchasing power, as well as consumptio­n and economic activity in general.

“So in that sense, it’s stimulativ­e to the macroecono­my,” he said.

Ontario’s legislativ­e committee will travel this week to Thunder Bay, North Bay, Ottawa, Kingston and Windsor, and next week to London, Kitchener, Niagara Falls, Hamilton and Toronto.

 ?? ADAM F. DULLUM / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? The Ontario government started committee hearings Monday on the $15/hour minimum wage.
ADAM F. DULLUM / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES The Ontario government started committee hearings Monday on the $15/hour minimum wage.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada