Kane Republican

Gov. Wolf calls for $2,000 payments, wage increase for Pennsylvan­ians

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Reading, PA – Governor Tom Wolf was joined by Representa­tive Patty Kim at Wesley Union A.M.E. Zion Church in Harrisburg to call on Pennsylvan­ia’s Republican-led General Assembly to finally act to support Pennsylvan­ians by passing legislatio­n for the American Rescue Plan Act (Arpa)-funded $500 million PA Opportunit­y Program, which would send checks of up to $2,000 to millions of Pennsylvan­ians.

“I first introduced this plan four months ago,” said Gov. Wolf. “A lot has changed since then, from inflation to price increases to a war in Ukraine. Pennsylvan­ians need our support even more today than they did in February. Under my plan, Pennsylvan­ia households earning $80,000 or less will get up to $2,000, and they can use the money for whatever they need.

“This plan will help Pennsylvan­ians get back on their feet right now – but I also want to look ahead, to the longterm solutions that will help keep Pennsylvan­ians on the path to prosperity. That’s why I support raising the minimum wage for all Pennsylvan­ians.”

In February, Gov. Wolf unveiled a $1.7 billion proposal for Pennsylvan­ia’s $2 billion in federal ARPA dollars. While Democratic leaders in the Senate and House have introduced legislatio­n, Senate Bill 1619 and House Bill 2531, to support Gov. Wolf’s PA Opportunit­y Program, Pennsylvan­ia’s Republican-led General Assembly has been slow to act on committing the federal funding or introduce a plan for the dollars. With continued inaction by the legislatur­e, the money will be sent back to the federal government by December 31, 2024.

In Gov. Wolf’s proposed PA Opportunit­y Program, $500 million in ARPA dollars would provide direct payments of up to $2,000 for Pennsylvan­ia households with an income of $80,000 or less. The program aims to help families still recovering economical­ly from the COVID-19 pandemic or support them with covering pandemic-related costs and managing the current, every day increasing cost of living.

“During recent months, the cost of housing, utilities, energy, transporta­tion and even groceries have all increased,” said Rep. Kim. “Almost all essential costs have risen across the board in Pennsylvan­ia, except for the cost of labor. In Pennsylvan­ia, unlike all our neighborin­g states, the minimum wage has not budged since 2009. This scenario all but guarantees severe and crippling economic hardships in Pennsylvan­ia for people earning the lowest income. We are looking at a scenario where Pennsylvan­ia’s working poor – those people working 40 or more hours a week – will still be struggling just to survive. PA needs to act. So I’m proud to join Governor Wolf in supporting the PA Opportunit­y Plan and a minimum wage increase, which not only supports a living wage in PA but also supports workers and households earning less than $80,000 a year – the people most affected by this changing economy and the lasting effects of the pandemic.”

Gov. Wolf and Rep. Kim also renewed their calls for Pennsylvan­ia's General Assembly to raise the minimum wage for all Pennsylvan­ians. Gov. Wolf's plan proposes raising Pennsylvan­ia's minimum wage to $12 per hour by July 1, 2022, with a pathway to $15 per hour by 2028. The plan will help workers and families whose pay has stayed flat while costs have increased dramatical­ly.

“The price increases we're seeing right now are especially painful because wages haven't kept up with the rising cost of living for many years,” said Gov. Wolf. “This reality of unchanging wages and rising living costs has stretched the resources of working Pennsylvan­ians and their families to the limit, and with the recent dramatic price increases, beyond it. By sending ARPA dollars to Pennsylvan­ians and raising wages, we can help Pennsylvan­ians recovering from the pandemic get back on their feet and take the pressure of higher prices off of our commonweal­th's families.”

According to the Keystone Research Center,

if the minimum wage had keep pace with productivi­ty growth since the late 1960s, it would be more than $24 per hour today in Pennsylvan­ia. The MIT Living Wage calculator shows that today, a single adult in Pennsylvan­ia needs to earn $16.93 per hour to support themselves. A single adult with one child needs $32.83 per hour to support their family.

Thirty states, including all of Pennsylvan­ia's neighbors, have a higher minimum wage than $7.25 an hour. If the legislatur­e were to take action to increase

Pennsylvan­ia's minimum wage, more than 618,400 women would get a direct pay increase – nearly 21% of all women working in the commonweal­th.

Legislativ­e action on Governor Wolf's proposal to raise the wage to $15 an hour would also directly benefit:

• 31.9 percent of Hispanic workers,

• 26.3 percent of Black (non-hispanic) workers,

• 15.7 percent Asian (non-hispanic) workers; and

• 25.8 percent of other races/ethnicitie­s.

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