Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Governor’s proposal to increase minimum wage faces obstacles

- By Marc Levy

Associated Press

HARRISBURG — Hearings on Gov. Tom Wolf’s $34.1 billion budget plan kicked off Monday with a volley of Republican attacks on the prospect of raising the minimum wage, signaling a tough road ahead for a new proposal the Democrat is backing.

The first House Appropriat­ions Committee budget hearing featured members of the Republican majority repeatedly criticizin­g the broader impact of a minimum wage increase, including whether it would choke off the supply of entry-level jobs, squeeze small businesses or drive up inflation.

Rep. Martina White, R-Philadelph­ia, questioned whether higher minimum wage earners would still earn too little to live without public benefits but then find themselves no longer eligible for the help.

Matthew Knittel, director of the Legislatur­e’s Independen­t Fiscal Office, testified that his agency is working on an analysis of the latest minimum wage proposal that Mr. Wolf supports.

Since 2009, Pennsylvan­ia has remained at the $7.25 federal

minimum wage level, one of 21 states to do so, and the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e has batted away Mr. Wolf’s proposals to raise it since he took office in 2015.

The latest Wolf-backed proposal would take Pennsylvan­ia’s hourly minimum to $12 this year, putting Pennsylvan­ia in line with the highest state minimum wages. Annual 50cent increases would bring it to $15 an hour in 2025, lifting Pennsylvan­ia into a group of 17 other states that have scheduled annual adjustment­s written into law.

Meanwhile, Pennsylvan­ia would join a handful of states by eliminatin­g its tipped wage minimum, now $2.83.

Those steps would boost pay for a million workers and provide savings in state programs for the poor, Mr. Wolf’s administra­tion says.

The Independen­t Fiscal Office issued a report in 2015 on a previous proposal backed by Mr. Wolf to raise the minimum wage to $10.10 an hour. In it, the agency cited federal Congressio­nal Budget Office estimates to conclude that raising the minimum wage would boost economic activity overall. It projected higher prices and a loss of some low-wage jobs, but also broader wage gains for those above a new minimum wage.

In a later budget hearing, Mr. Wolf’s revenue secretary, Daniel Hassell, defended a minimum wage increase, saying “there is a great deal of evidence that the effect on employment is not significan­t.”

Raising the minimum wage has backing from labor unions, Democratic lawmakers and some moderate Republican­s, and public polling shows it tends to rate well among voters.

In a forum Monday sponsored by the Greater Philadelph­ia Chamber of Commerce, Mr. Wolf told a crowd at Drexel University that his proposal would spur a big increase in demand and help curb the state’s subsidizat­ion through public benefits programs of employers who pay the lowest wages.

In a statement, the office of Senate Majority Leader Jake Corman, R-Centre, said the Senate GOP is open to discussing a minimum wage increase, but that Mr. Wolf’s plan “is not anywhere near reasonable.”

Michael Straub, a spokesman for House Majority Leader Bryan Cutler, R-Lancaster, acknowledg­ed that some caucus members support a minimum wage increase but gave no sign that GOP leadership is interested in discussing a compromise. Rather, the House GOP leadership is working on legislatio­n to “help more workers transition from minimum wage work into good paying, family sustaining careers,” he said.

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