The Signal

County’s minimum wage to rise

Increase will go up to $12 an hour for some businesses in unincorpor­ated areas

- By Christina Cox Signal Staff Writer

On July 1, unincorpor­ated areas of Los Angeles County will experience a minimum wage increase to $12 an hour for businesses with 26 or more employees and to $10.50 an hour for businesses with 25 or fewer employees.

The increase represents a jump from $10.50 to $12 an hour for businesses with 26 or more

employees and an increase from $10 to $10.50 an hour for businesses with 25 or fewer employees.

And that growth caused one local business to actually shed clients to reduce costs.

In the Santa Clarita Valley, the increase will only affect the unincorpor­ated areas of Agua Dulce, Castaic and Stevenson Ranch.

The mandated increase, however, will not impact businesses located within the city limits.

“The city of Santa Clarita is currently not considerin­g the minimum wage increase so we will be sticking to the state minimum wage requiremen­ts,” said Mayumi Miyasato, communicat­ions specialist for the city of Santa Clarita.

The county increase is expected to go up on July 1 each year in unincorpor­ated areas of Los Angeles County until 2021, when the minimum wage reaches $15 an hour. In 2022, the county will annually adjust wages based on changes to the Consumer Price Index to keep up with cost of living.

In the Santa Clarita Valley, the increase will affect major employers like Six Flags Magic Mountain, which is the largest employer outside of city limits.

The increase will also affect companies like AMS Fulfillmen­t, which is headquarte­red and operates a warehouse distributi­on center outside of city limits.

Ken Wiseman, CEO and managing partner of AMS Fulfillmen­t, said the increase has altered the way the company hires employees, uses technology and operates outside of the state.

“We’ve certainly seen this coming so it’s not a surprise,” Wiseman said. “This is the biggest increase we’ve ever had in our company’s history; it’s an increase of about 14 percent.”

To offset the wage increase, AMS Fulfillmen­t invested in technology to reduce staffing on some accounts. The company also had to remove some clients and slow its overall growth.

“We’ve had to go through our client base and get rid of a lot of our customers because of the increase in minimum wage,” Wiseman said. “We are about 100 employees less than we might have been… We still grew by 80 employees, but we slowed our growth as a company due to the fact that we knew we couldn’t handle these clients.”

The company also moved some business outside of California, where the market provides a more competitiv­e cost environmen­t.

With the wage increase, AMS Fulfillmen­t is also focusing on investing in its current employees to increase their skillsets and hiring new employees with greater skill levels following a tougher screening process.

“We opened our learning center and are working with COC to provide a number of educationa­l opportunit­ies and our apprentice program,” Wiseman said. “We are looking for employees that are engaged in the success of the company and… are working toward maximizing the profitabil­ity of the company.”

Wiseman said the company still wants to do business here, but is now changing the way it operates in the state.

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