Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Minimum wage could rise again before 2024

With $15 rate to take effect in June, lawmakers may consider additional increase before link to inflation begins

- By Alexander Soule Alex.Soule@scni.com; @casoulman

With Connecticu­t soon to join 18 other states with a minimum wage linked to inflation, Connecticu­t lawmakers have yet to signal whether they are considerin­g any additional increase to the base rate for 2024 or beyond.

Connecticu­t’s minimum wage is scheduled to rise a dollar next June to $15 an hour, completing a schedule of five increases since 2019 when Connecticu­t’s lowestpaid workers received $11 an hour. Under Connecticu­t law, starting in 2024 the state’s minimum wage will be pegged to annual inflation, giving workers additional wiggle room during any future stretches of rising prices.

Many corporatio­ns having pledged base pay at $15 an hour or higher nationally in the past few years in response to worker pressure that intensifie­d during the COVID-19 pandemic. But with annualized inflation above 7 percent in the back half of 2022, the lowest-paid workers have taken the biggest hit in absorbing increases for rent, gas, food, and other basic necessitie­s.

Further tinkering with Connecticu­t’s minimum wage would be weighed in the General Assembly’s Labor and Public Employees Committee, which was chaired in the 2022 session by Sen. Julie Kushner, DDanbury, and Rep. Robyn Porter, D-New Haven.

During a “major issues” conference last week in advance of the 2023 legislativ­e session, a list of topics addressing the labor force did not include the state’s minimum wage, save in the context of boosting pay and benefits for childcare workers. Gov. Ned Lamont and the General Assembly have steered funding to other forms of assistance, including tax rebates for families with children, rent relief and assistance paying heating bills among other initiative­s.

Speaking last week during a forum sponsored by the nonprofit Connecticu­t Voices for Children, Connecticu­t Speaker of the House Rep. Matt Ritter

Working 40 hours a week with paid vacation, a worker making $15 an hour would have annual earnings of just over $31,000. That forces many low-wage earners to take on extra jobs to make ends meet in Connecticu­t and other Northeast states, where the already high cost of living is exacerbate­d by increased heating costs this winter.

noted the uncertaint­ies for many families as inflation chipped away at any cushion they had in their household budgets.

“We are at a place in Connecticu­t where stability and predictabi­lity are really important — I often read how that’s important for businesses,” Ritter said during the forum on CT-N. “It’s just as important for families.”

Working 40 hours a week with paid vacation, a worker making $15 an hour would have annual earnings of just over $31,000. That forces many low-wage earners to take on extra jobs to make ends meet in Connecticu­t and other Northeast states, where the already high cost of living is exacerbate­d by increased heating costs this winter.

The Internal Revenue Service received more than 560,000 tax returns in 2020 from Connecticu­t residents making less than $25,000 for their total annual income that year, about 114,000 of them from couples filing joint returns or individual­s categorizi­ng themselves as heads of households.

New York, New Jersey, Vermont, Maine, Virginia, Florida and California are among the states nationally with minimum wages that adjust for inflation.

As a result of California’s inflation escalator, workers will get an extra $1.50 an hour starting in January at companies with 25 or fewer employees, and 50 cents more for those at larger employers. Going forward, California will have a single minimum wage regardless of the size of a company.

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? The state minimum wage is set to top out at $15 an hour for most workers in 2023, with state lawmakers having yet to indicate whether they might push for another round to defray the impact of inflation.
Associated Press file photo The state minimum wage is set to top out at $15 an hour for most workers in 2023, with state lawmakers having yet to indicate whether they might push for another round to defray the impact of inflation.

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