Santa Fe New Mexican

House votes to hike minimum wage

$9.25 benchmark approved on 37-30 vote

- By Andrew Oxford

The state House of Representa­tives voted Friday night to raise the hourly minimum wage to $9.25 from $7.50 in 2018.

The 37-30 vote, just days after the Senate overwhelmi­ngly passed a slightly smaller increase to $9, signals that a raise in the minimum wage is increasing­ly likely as the legislativ­e session enters its final weeks. The issue has been a priority for many Democrats, who promised a raise during last year’s election, but it also has won some support from Republican­s.

The House vote on HB 442 was not strictly along party lines. Rep. Sarah Maestas Barnes, R-Albuquerqu­e, broke with her party to vote in favor of the bill, while Rep. Candie Sweetser, D-Deming, voted against it.

As the bill heads to the Senate, it is unclear how high lawmakers will agree to go with a wage increase and whether Gov. Susana Martinez will approve it.

The Governor’s Office said last week that Martinez could support a raise, but it has not commented on any particular bill. “The governor supports raising the minimum wage so long that it’s in line with neighborin­g states and doesn’t hurt small businesses,” spokesman Chris Sanchez said in an email.

Republican­s generally depicted HB 442 as a burden on businesses that would ultimately backfire on employees by leading companies to hire fewer staff.

Democrats have argued that the measure will improve the quality of life for the lowest-paid New Mexicans, who have not seen an increase in the minimum wage since 2009.

“It’s appalling when hardworkin­g New Mexicans can’t put food on the table despite working full-time,” the bill’s co-sponsor, Rep. Debbie Rodella, D-Española, said in a statement. “Too many families are only one crisis away from a complete economic breakdown.”

Democrats voted down a last-minute proposal by House Minority Leader Nate Gentry, R-Albuquerqu­e, to change the bill, lowering the increase to $8.45. Gentry said the amount is the average of minimum wages in neighborin­g states. A minimum wage of $9.25 would still fall below Arizona’s rate of $10 and Colorado’s rate of $9.30. But it would be higher than the federal rate of $7.25 in Texas, Utah and Oklahoma. “We need to remain competitiv­e,” Gentry argued. HB 442 would increase the hourly minimum wage to $9.25 on Jan. 1, 2018. The hourly wage for tipped employees, such as waitresses and baristas, would increase from $2.13 to 40 percent of the new statewide minimum wage, a total of $3.70.

But the bill also would prohibit local government­s from imposing certain labor regulation­s, such as policies curbing flexible scheduling decried by workers rights groups as

leaving low-wage laborers with uncertaint­y about the number of hours they may work in a week. Some lawmakers also raised concerns that the provision would block local government­s from requiring businesses provide paid sick leave for employees, as has been proposed in Albuquerqu­e.

HB 442 would not adjust the minimum wage annually based on the cost of living.

A few local government­s across New Mexico have already raised minimum wages above the state’s rate. Tied to the cost of living, the minimum wage in Santa Fe has climbed to $11.09. The lowest-paid workers in Albuquerqu­e could see a boost from the bill passed Friday night, however, with the minimum wage there currently set at $8.80 for many workers receiving few or no benefits.

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