The Peterborough Examiner

Wage hike is about removing poverty in Ontario

- Send us opinions, comment and other feedback. Please address your letters to The Editor, The Peterborou­gh Examiner, 60 Hunter St. E., Peterborou­gh, K9H 1G5 (Fax 705-741-3217) (exam.letters@sunmedia.ca) All letters must bear the name, address and daytime p

Re: Minimum wage hike will hurt, especially in Peterborou­gh, according to study, Aug. 14

The proposed increase to minimum wage continues to be debated here in Peterborou­gh, but what appears to be missing from the debate is attention to the fact that increasing incomes for the lowest wage earners in our communitie­s will also have benefits. These include decreased food insecurity and better health outcomes, especially for our children. It is unfortunat­e that an artificial divide has been created that seems to pit business owners against their employees, forcing everyone to choose a side. We all share in the responsibi­lity to find solutions that benefit the health and well-being of ALL our citizens. Reducing poverty is one of the best actions we can take as a society.

The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternativ­es (CCPA) has just released a report titled “Losing Ground” that shows that in this province income inequality has grown dramatical­ly over the past 15 years. According to the CCPA, the bottom half of families raising children in Ontario saw its share of earnings fall to 19 per cent of total labour market income between 2000 and 2015. This is far worse than what is occurring in other provinces. There is ample evidence showing that the wider the divide is between the lowest and highest incomes, the worse the health outcomes are for everyone—rich and poor alike. There is a health imperative in working towards greater income equality and a $15 minimum wage is but one step in moving us in that direction.

I am concerned that the impact analysis highlighte­d in your recent article seems to focus solely on the direct economic costs to businesses without factoring in the potential benefits to both business owners and to our communitie­s. Those benefits will not only be economic (e.g., more money in the pockets of low income workers, lowered demand on social assistance programs, higher productivi­ty rates) but social and health-related as well (e.g., healthier workers, better nourished children and stronger communitie­s). Dr. Rosana Salvaterra Medical Officer of Health Peterborou­gh Public Health

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