Santa Fe New Mexican

Bill would raise state minimum wage to $15

- By Michael Gerstein mgerstein@sfnewmexic­an.com

State Rep. Patricia Roybal Caballero, D-Albuquerqu­e, has introduced a bill to boost the state’s minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2025, ahead of the legislativ­e session beginning Jan. 21.

At a time of rising rent costs, higher medical bills and decades of stagnant wages, the third-term lawmaker said the legislatio­n is necessary because it is becoming increasing­ly difficult for New Mexico residents to make ends meet.

House Bill 82 would mandate an increase to $9 an hour in 2020, then $10.50 in 2021, $12 in 2022 and $15 an hour by 2025. Roybal Caballero calls it “living wage” legislatio­n and has been trying to pass similar measures since she was first elected as a state representa­tive in 2015. “It’s without a question what we should be affording every hard-working family,” Roybal Caballero said. “It’s unconscion­able for me to have individual­s ... have to work two and three jobs just to be able to afford the essentials.”

The bill comes months after Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham signed into a law a measure that will gradually raise the state’s minimum wage to $12 an hour by 2023. The state law likely won’t affect workers in Santa Fe and Santa Fe County, which both have a minimum wage of $11.80 an hour — higher than the rest of the state. Those rates increase annually based on increases in the Consumer Price Index for the Western Region.

Roybal Caballero’s more progressiv­e $15-an-hour plan is unlikely to pass in the upcoming legislativ­e session. Lujan Grisham and other Democratic leaders have not indicated another minimum-wage increase is a priority during the 30-day session, which will focus on the budget.

The Governor’s Office did not immediatel­y respond to an inquiry on whether Lujan Grisham would support increasing the state’s minimum wage to $15. House Speaker Brian Egolf declined to comment on the legislatio­n.

During the 2019 session, lawmakers backed the more conservati­ve increases over legislatio­n Roybal Caballero sponsored that would have doubled the state’s minimum wage to $15 by 2020. Her 2019 bill’s aggressive timeline would have given New Mexico the nation’s highest minimum wage, but it found little support even in a heavily Democratic Legislatur­e with a new Democratic governor.

Roybal Caballero calls it a “moral imperative” to offer New Mexico workers a so-called living wage. But Carol Wight, executive director of the New Mexico Restaurant Associatio­n, said increasing the minimum wage to $15 an hour would undercut small businesses, hurting their chances of staying afloat. “Small businesses across the state would be shackled by that, so I think it would be not a good time to do this,” Wight said Tuesday.

Although wages have grown for most U.S. workers since 1964, purchasing power has not, according to data from the nonpartisa­n Pew Research Center. Adjusted for inflation, the average U.S. wage has about the same purchasing power it had 40 years ago — despite ever-increasing profits for corporatio­ns and shareholde­rs, and wage increases for the highest-paid workers.

Average hourly earnings actually reached an all-time U.S. high in terms of purchasing power 45 years ago, when $4.03 an hour was worth what $23.68 is today, according to the Hamilton Project.

In New Mexico, about 245,000 people, or 31 percent of the state’s workforce, earn wages at or near $12 per hour. About 159,000 are paid less than $12, according to a data analysis by the nonprofit New Mexico Voices for Children.

Roybal Caballero said she considers increasing New Mexico’s minimum wage “a state emergency.”

“The disparity is so great right now it literally is going to take generation­s [to undo it],” she said. “Nine dollars an hour does not make a difference in the disparity . ... It does not begin to break that historical cycle of poverty that has kept us at 48, 49, 50 [in the nation].”

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