Thousands of fast-food burger-flippers, Wal-Mart
cashiers, home-care providers, adjunct professors, and airport workers on
Wednesday will push for a $15-an-hour minimum wage in marches around the nation
and in Philadelphia.
The effort - part of a drive since 2012 by the Service
Employees International Union - will include a march on Broad Street and a
rally at 30th Street and the Schuylkill. That's just on Wednesday.
On Tuesday, trending online was the case of Dan Price,
founder of Gravity Payments, a Seattle credit-card processing firm, who told
workers their minimum wage would be raised to $70,000 a year, or $33.65 an hour
- for everyone, even low-paid clerks.
Gravity's average pay now is $48,000, or $23 an hour.
"As much as I'm a capitalist, there is nothing in
the market that is making me do this," Price told the New York Times.
He was moved by research showing that money does buy
increased happiness as wages rise to about $75,000 a year. After that, money's
impact is minor.
Whether increasing the minimum wage leads to a better
life is a matter of debate. Through trade associations, business owners have
said they will cut hours or positions if wages go up.
That's what happened in Oakland, Calif., when the minimum
hourly wage rose to $12.25 from $9 on March 1, according to Michael Saltsman,
research director at Employment Policies Institute, a policy shop in Washington
whose research shows that raising wages is bad for business and workers.
"We surveyed businesses there," he said. Some
reported cutting hours for workers and for operations. "A couple said they
were likely to close."
Wednesday's march comes as more attention is being
focused on low-wage workers. After years of rallies, wage increases have been
enacted in cities and states, including Seattle and Oakland.
In Pennsylvania, Gov. Wolf backs an increase to $10.10 an
hour from the federal hourly minimum of $7.25. In New Jersey, the minimum
hourly wage is $8.38, up from $8.25, due to a legislatively mandated tie to
inflation.
Companies also have responded, with Wal-Mart and Target,
among others, announcing increases.
On April 1, McDonald's said it would raise its minimum
wage $1 over the locally mandated minimum wage for all company-owned stores,
affecting 90,000 employees. However, 90 percent of McDonald's restaurants are
franchises, with individual owners setting pay.
Wednesday's marches begin at 6 a.m. outside the
McDonald's at Broad and Allegheny Avenue, a franchise restaurant owned by
Jo-Dan Enterprises of Bala Cynwyd.
At 1:30 p.m., the action will shift to Temple
University's campus, where adjunct professors attempting to unionize will join
students and workers.
A larger rally, followed by a march, will occur at 3 p.m.
at Broad and Arch Street, with a smaller rally set for the University of
Pennsylvania campus at the same time. Both groups are expected to meet at 4:30
p.m. at 30th and the Schuylkill.
Bruce Howard, 53, who lives in a homeless shelter in
Darby Borough, thinks Wednesday's march will help workers like him.
"It's a blessing," he said.
A year ago, Howard became involved in a union-organized
campaign to improve wages in industrial laundries, where he worked. At the
time, he said, he was earning $50 a day in cash under the table for a day's
work.
Howard now holds down another laundry job that comes with
a legitimate paycheck and $10.35 in hourly wages.
"I'm marching for the greater cause - for all
Americans to have a better way of life," he said.
Source: Philly.com
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