Mayor Nutter is expected to sign an Executive Order on
Tuesday that will raise the minimum wage requirement in city contracts and
subcontracts, according to emails sent to City Council members.
The mayor’s official schedule only cites that at 2 p.m.
Nutter will sign an Executive Order and offer remarks. Nutter’s spokesman Mark
McDonald would not confirm Monday that the mayor’s new Executive Order is
related to the minimum wage issue.
But the following e-mail was sent to City Council members:
“Dear Member of City
Council:
Mayor Michael A. Nutter invites you to attend a public
Executive Order signing tomorrow, May 6th at 2:00 PM in the Mayor's Reception
Room in City Hall.
The Executive Order will raise the minimum wage required in
City contracts and subcontracts, and implement annual adjustments for
inflation. The Executive Order will also
direct contracting departments and other agencies to implement the requirements
as to subcontractors, consistent with recent legislative actions.
The Mayor would welcome your attendance.”
The invitation did not list the minimum wage amount and at
least one council member said Monday that she had not yet seen a copy of the
order.
The signing would come exactly two weeks prior to the May 20
primary election, which will feature a minimum wage ballot question.
Councilman W. Wilson Goode Jr. sponsored a bill to put a
charter-change amendment on the May primary ballot, allowing Philadelphia
voters to decide whether the city’s living wage standard should extend to
subcontractors, including airport workers, to $10.88 an hour. Airport workers
earn an average of $7.85 an hour.
The "living wage" standards currently apply only
to companies with direct city contracts. A city Law Department ruling last year
said the charter does not give Council the authority to force the standard on
subcontractors.
The standard requires city contractors to pay their
employees $10.88 an hour, or 150 percent of the federal minimum wage.
President Obama has been pushing for a $10.10 federal
minimum wage but has failed to win the backing of the Republican-controlled
House of Representatives. There is also a more progressive movement in some
major cities, including Philadelphia, under the umbrella of 15Now who are
pushing for a $15 an hour minimum wage.
Source: Philly.com
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