Toronto Star

Minimum-wage hike enshrined in law

Liberals add 2019 increase to new jobs act being studied, well past next year’s election

- ROBERT BENZIE QUEEN’S PARK BUREAU CHIEF

A Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government would be forced to change labour laws in order to derail the $15-an-hour minimum wage increase that takes effect six months after the June 2018 election.

In an unusual move, the Liberals have embedded the increase in the Fair Workplaces, Better Jobs Act being studied this summer by an allparty committee.

Under the legislatio­n expected to pass this fall, the minimum wage, now $11.40 an hour, will jump to $14 on Jan. 1.

It will then increase to $15 an hour on Jan. 1, 2019, well after the June 7, 2018, election, before being linked to the inflation rate that October.

“Ontario’s economy is leading growth. A $15 minimum wage will help ensure families experience this growth in their own lives,” Premier Kathleen Wynne tweeted Thursday.

But Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Leader Patrick Brown, who leads Wynne in most public-opinion polls, has warned the increases are too much too soon for employers to bear.

“Do I think we should have a 32per-cent increase immediatel­y without a cost-benefit analysis? No,” Brown said three weeks ago.

“The way that the premier has announced it is too fast, too quick. It’s not giving proper notice to our job creators . . . so, yes, I have significan­t concerns,” the Tory leader said.

“I’m sure, right now, Kathleen Wynne is looking for distractio­ns for the next election,” he said May 31, the day before the legislatio­n was tabled.

“I get that Ontario right now is unaffordab­le. I get that it is difficult for people to live in Ontario right now — and frankly that’s Kathleen Wynne’s mess from the last 14 years — but do you need to do this 32-per-cent hike immediatel­y? Or can you pace it out?”

In an interview with the Star last week, Wynne acknowledg­ed the Lib- erals would campaign on the minimum wage increases as well as the new OHIP+ pharmacare plan that provides prescripti­on coverage of 4,400 medication­s for everyone under 25, which launches Jan. 1.

That appears to be one reason that a timeline for the wage hikes is specified in the legislatio­n. “(Determinat­ion of minimum wage) is amended to increase the minimum wage on January 1, 2018. The minimum wage increases again on January 1, 2019, and is subject to an annual inflation adjustment on October 1 of every year starting in 2019,” the bill reads.

The premier said her party would remind voters that higher wages and better drug coverage could be lost if Brown’s Conservati­ves are victorious next June.

“That will be part of the subscript, obviously, because we’re different. We are different parties. We’re different people. We have different sensibilit­ies and different values, as far as I can tell,” said Wynne.

“So, that’s obviously going to have to be part of the discussion.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada