Chattanooga Times Free Press

Kansas plan to keep low wages for disabled angers advocates

- BY JOHN HANNA

Kansas legislator­s are considerin­g a proposal that many disability rights advocates say would encourage employers to keep paying disabled workers less than the minimum wage, bucking a national trend.

A Kansas House bill would expand a state income tax credit for goods and services purchased from vendors employing disabled workers, doubling the total allowed to $10 million annually. Vendors qualify now by paying all of their disabled workers at least the minimum wage, but the measure would allow vendors to pay some workers less if those workers aren’t involved in purchases of goods and services to earn the tax credit.

Supporters argue the bill would enable more vendors to participat­e, boosting job and vocational training opportunit­ies for disabled people.

The Kansas debate comes as employers nationally have moved toward paying at least the federal hourly minimum wage of $7.25. About 122,000 disabled workers received less in 2019, compared to about 295,000 in 2010, according to a U.S. Government Accountabi­lity Office report to Congress in January.

Critics argue that belowminim­um-wage jobs exploit workers such as Trey Lockwood, a 30-year-old Kansas City-area resident with autism, who holds down three part-time jobs paying more than the minimum wage. At one of them, The Golden Scoop ice cream shop, he greets customers and makes ice cream with a “spinner,” a machine he said is like a washing machine. He has money to buy clothes and other things.

“I feel good about that,” he said.

His mother, Michele Lockwood, said employers who pay less than the minimum wage aren’t fostering independen­ce.

Neil Romano, a member of the National Council on Disability, agreed, adding, “It is very much against the flow of history.”

But other advocates and operators of programs questioned about their wages said the severity of some physical, intellectu­al and mental disabiliti­es mean such programs can’t be eliminated without depriving people of valuable opportunit­ies.

Pat Jonas, president and CEO of the Cerebral Palsy Research Foundation in Wichita, Kansas, said the goal is a more “user friendly” tax credit program shorn of a big burden for some vendors. If employers currently want to participat­e, while also maintainin­g below-minimum-wage jobs as vocational training, they must set up a new, separate company or nonprofit paying workers at or above the minimum wage.

“It’s just sad that everyone can’t be pulling in the same direction,” Jonas said, adding that the foundation has always paid at or above the minimum wage.

Thirteen states bar belowminim­um-wage jobs for disabled workers, including California, Colorado and Tennessee, according to the Associatio­n of People Supporting Employment First, which promotes inclusive job policies. Virginia lawmakers sent a bill last month to Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin, and there’s a bipartisan proposal for a national ban in Congress.

 ?? AP PHOTO/JOHN HANNA ?? At the Statehouse in Topeka, Kan., state Rep. Stephanie Clayton, D-Overland Park, asks a question Monday during a meeting of the House commerce committee about a bill that would continue and expand a state income tax credit for people and companies that purchase goods and services from vendors that hire disabled workers.
AP PHOTO/JOHN HANNA At the Statehouse in Topeka, Kan., state Rep. Stephanie Clayton, D-Overland Park, asks a question Monday during a meeting of the House commerce committee about a bill that would continue and expand a state income tax credit for people and companies that purchase goods and services from vendors that hire disabled workers.
 ?? AP PHOTO/HEATHER HOLLINGSWO­RTH ?? Patrick Chapman, 27, prepares for customers Thursday at The Golden Scoop, an Overland Park, Kan., ice cream and coffee shop that employs workers with developmen­tal disabiliti­es, paying them more than minimum wage.
AP PHOTO/HEATHER HOLLINGSWO­RTH Patrick Chapman, 27, prepares for customers Thursday at The Golden Scoop, an Overland Park, Kan., ice cream and coffee shop that employs workers with developmen­tal disabiliti­es, paying them more than minimum wage.

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