OLYMPIA…Sen.
Linda Evans Parlette, R-Wenatchee, has introduced a bill
aimed at helping small businesses keep their doors open
and retain jobs.
Senate Bill 5362 would set Washington’s minimum wage
at its current $8.55 an hour and eliminate the
requirement that the rate be raised each year. On
January 1, Washington’s minimum wage automatically rose
from $8.07 to $8.55 an hour – the highest rate in the
nation. Small businesses struggling to stay afloat and
keep from cutting jobs during these tough economic times
requested the bill.
“We all support paying people good
and fair wages, but with our economy in such dire shape
we’ve literally reached the point where these wage hikes
are hurting the people they were designed to help,” said
Parlette. “Many small businesses are hanging by a thread
and these automatic wage increases, which must be
adhered to whether or not businesses can afford it, are
threatening their viability. Employers are being forced
to cut back work hours, forego hiring people, or worse
yet lay people off or even shut their doors and
eliminate every job in the company. This means more
people out of work, which hurts those who need these
jobs the most.”
Initiative 688, passed by voters in 1998, required
that beginning Jan. 1, 2001 and annually thereafter,
Washington’s minimum wage rate must be adjusted based on
changes in the federal
Consumer Price
Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers.
Because this is an urban index, it is especially hard on
employers in small communities that often don’t reach
the level of income and ability to pay higher wages that
urban businesses do.
In 1999, the year after I-688
passed, the state minimum wage was $5.70 an hour. Today,
at $8.55, Washington’s minimum wage is a full $2 more
than the $6.55 federal minimum wage (a rate that applies
in states that don’t set their own rate). Prior to 1998,
the Legislature was in control of Washington’s minimum
wage rate.
“It’s important to remember that
employers don’t pay just the minimum wage,” Parlette
pointed out. “They also have to pay state and federal
payroll taxes on top of that amount. Based on the hourly
$8.55 rate, that means employers are really paying more
than $10 an hour for each minimum-wage employee. That
fact, coupled with the rising costs of supplies and the
fact that consumers are spending less, means businesses
are in danger of closing.”
U.S. Census data shows that less than 1 percent of
workers over the age of 25 are earning the minimum wage.
These workers tend to be young, single adults, teenagers
living at home or individuals providing their households
with a second income.
“Companies are cutting jobs and
closing their doors every day,” Parlette said. “That’s
why it’s important to pass this bill, and pass it early
this year. The sooner we do so, the more jobs we can
save.”
Parlette’s bill has been referred to the
Senate Labor, Commerce and Consumer Protection Committee.
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For more information contact:
Rebecca Japhet, Senate
Republican Communications Director,
(360) 786-7516