The Niagara Falls Review

Some employees see trickle-up increases with min. wage rise

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Nick Cluley and his wife, who have always paid their Coffee Public employees more than minimum wage, have boosted everyone’s pay by $1.25 an hour since Jan. 1 — not just those earning below $14, as a new Ontario law required.

They did that “to avoid tensions that might come from more experience­d people, you know, being crunched right up against the same salary as someone that just started,” he said.

The new starting wage is $14.75, though the staff average is closer to $15.45, he said, adding they raised prices by about 10 per cent on everything they serve in their Toronto and Port Hope, Ont., shops.

From small mom-and-pop shops to a discount retail giant, there are already examples of companies that have bumped the hourly pay for employees who were making close to the new $14 an hour minimum — suggesting Ontario’s recent minimum wage hike is affecting more than just the lowest paid workers.

There’s little question that a minimum wage hike in Ontario will have a “trickle up” effect to raise wages for other workers, said Bernard Wolf, a professor emeritus at York University’s Schulich School of Business in Toronto.

“The question is simply how much and how pervasive that is,” he said, adding it’s likely a considerab­le number of employers in Ontario — where the minimum wage rose to $14 on Jan. 1, — will make such a move.

That ripple effect through the economy comes as employees who find minimum wage has now risen close to what they’re earning ask for raises to reflect their comparativ­e skill level, Wolf said, or because their cost-of-living has increased as the price of goods goes up to offset the higher labour cost.

For employers already making the move, they benefit from positionin­g themselves as the good guy compared to other companies that raised the ire of consumers for clawing back employee benefits and other perks instead, he said.

Union Local 613 co-owner Ivan Gedz raised wages for all his kitchen staff to $16 in November, after realizing his Ottawa eatery could not only meet the new minimum in January, but surpass it.

The raises, which amount to between 50 cents and as much as $4 per hour depending on the employee, reflect Gedz’s belief in equality and because he realized the situation presented an opportunit­y to be an industry leader, he said.

He raised prices on some items to offset the hit to his bottom line.

But small businesses aren’t the only ones setting a higher bar.

Walmart Canada, which employs more than 95,000 associates, increased its starting minimum wage on Dec. 23, 2017 just ahead of the Ontario-wide hike, said spokeswoma­n Anika Malik, adding all the company’s associates earn more than their provincial minimum wage.

“All pay bands also moved up accordingl­y to maintain appropriat­e relative compensati­on at all levels,” she said. The company isn’t cutting any roles, and employees will still be eligible for bonuses and performanc­e increases, Malik said.

Meanwhile, one coffee chain has applied the pay increase to more than just their Ontario-based employees.

JJ Bean Coffee Roasters, which has more than a dozen locations across Toronto and Vancouver, first increased wages in Toronto on Dec. 17, 2017 and followed suit in Vancouver on Jan. 14, 2018, according to a letter from its senior leadership team.

Its national starting wage is now $14 an hour, and it increased wages for all employees making below $20 hourly. The company increased prices at its cafes by one to three per cent.

“We believe people have intrinsic value and that everyone who takes part in the journey of coffee — from farmers to baristas — deserves to be fairly rewarded for their work,” the letter reads.

The Canadian Press

 ?? POSTMEDIA FILES ?? Nick Cluley raised his Coffee Public workers’ wages by $1.25 an hour, and not just those earning below the new $14 minimum wage, to avoid tensions with workers at his with more experience.
POSTMEDIA FILES Nick Cluley raised his Coffee Public workers’ wages by $1.25 an hour, and not just those earning below the new $14 minimum wage, to avoid tensions with workers at his with more experience.

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