Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Wolf renews bid to put state’s minimum wage among highest

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG >> Gov. Tom Wolf rolled out a second-term proposal Wednesday to vault Pennsylvan­ia’s minimum wage to one of the highest in the nation after similar firstterm proposals by the Democrat fell flat in the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e.

Wolf wants to take the hourly minimum to $12 this year, putting Pennsylvan­ia in line with the highest state minimum wages, according to federal data. Pennsylvan­ia also would join a handful of states by eliminatin­g its tipped wage minimum, now $2.83, under legislatio­n being introduced with Wolf’s support.

Those steps would boost pay for a million workers and provide more than $100 million in annual savings in state programs for the poor, Wolf said.

“Today too many people are working harder and harder and they still can’t afford basics like food and transporta­tion and shelter,” Wolf told a crowded news conference in his Capitol reception room. “Despite working full time, too many people still need help from public benefits programs to get by.”

Wolf’s proposal includes annual 50-cent increases to bring the state’s minimum wage to $15 an hour in 2025, lifting Pennsylvan­ia into a group with 17 other states that have scheduled annual adjustment­s written into law.

Washington, D.C., and some cities have boosted their minimum wages to above $12 an hour, but Pennsylvan­ia law forbids its municipali­ties from setting a local wage rate.

Since 2009, Pennsylvan­ia has remained at the $7.25 federal minimum, one of 21 states to do so. The other 29 states, including each of Pennsylvan­ia’s neighbors, have boosted their minimum wages to above the federal minimum.

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.

However, it is opposed by leaders of the House and Senate Republican majorities and business groups, including the Pennsylvan­ia Chamber of Business and Industry and the National Federation of Independen­t Business.

The chamber warned that the governor’s plan, by requiring such steep wage hikes, is “disconnect­ed from reality for many Pennsylvan­ia employers.” Restaurant­s operating on thin profit margins would see wages rise by more than 500 percent, it said.

Employers, particular­ly small businesses, will be forced to lay off workers, raise prices, cut back hours or trim benefits to stay afloat, business groups warn. Higher wages also could cut into a business owner’s ability to invest in capital or an expansion, they say.

A targeted state-level earned income tax credit may better focus support to where it is needed, to a lowincome parent, and avoid the negative impact of a broader wage increase, said Alex Halper of the Pennsylvan­ia Chamber of Business and Industry.

Wolf’s administra­tion is also considerin­g a regulation to boost pay for hundreds of thousands of salaried employees by making them eligible for overtime pay.

It has been reviewing feedback on it after holding a public comment period last year, and Wolf said Wednesday that he remained committed to it to prevent employers from skirting overtime regulation­s by shifting hourly workers to salaried.

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