Editorial By Raise Illinois Member In State Journal Register!

28 02 2013

sjr

sid

Raising the minimum wage isn’t bad for business

By Sid Mohn, Guest Columnist and president of Heartland Alliance for Human Needs and Human Rights

Gov. Pat Quinn recently called for an increase in Illinois’s minimum wage in his State of the State speech. His proposal prompted a flurry of debate in the media, but one thing was missing: the facts.

When you look at the data, it’s clear that raising the minimum wage isn’t bad for business. In fact, it would create jobs and an influx of money into the state economy while reducing taxpayer costs by moving workers out of poverty.

Illinois is home to 400,000 minimum wage workers. These are the workers that keep our state running — the men and women that prepare and serve food at our favorite restaurants, pour our morning cup of coffee, clean our office buildings, hotels and homes, bag our groceries, deliver our pizza, and ring up so many of the purchases we make every day.

Click here to read more…





President & IL Governor Support Raising Minimum Wage!

14 02 2013

President Obama, in his State of the Union address, expressed his support for raising the national minimum wage to $9 and Governor Quinn said in his State of the State speech that he supported raising the Illinois minimum wage to $10 an hour to “honor the productivity of our workers”!

This is very encouraging and shows that our hard work is paying off! The media is also starting to catch on that the evidence is behind us as well. As the Chicago Tribune recently reported:

“A now-famous case study published in 1994 by labor economists David Card and Alan Krueger began to change conventional wisdom. They compared employment trends in fast-food restaurants in New Jersey, which had just hiked its minimum wage, with trends in neighboring Pennsylvania, and found little impact on low-wage workers.

Berkeley’s Reich, along with two economists from the universities of Massachusetts Amherst and North Carolina, expanded on the research by examining restaurant employment in neighboring counties in different states with different minimum wage levels. They studied 16 years’ worth of data and found no negative effects on low-wage employment.

Instead, they found that higher wages reduced employee turnover, which saves business money.”

The Tribune also reported that, “Senate President John Cullerton and House Majority Leader Barbara Flynn Currie quickly embraced a possible wage hike. Cullerton flatly predicted, ‘We’ll be able to pass a minimum wage bill.’”

Please send a letter to the editor of your local newspaper and call your legislators to tell them why you support raising the minimum wage. They need to hear from Illinois workers and not just big business! Let your voice be heard. IMPORTANT: The bill number to raise the minimum wage has been changed to SENATE BILL 68 (It used to be SB 1565). When you talk about the bill to politicians of reporters, please use the updated bill number. Thank you!

Click below for recent news coverage:

Chicago Tribune, “Minimum wage hikes: Job killer or economic helper? Quinn rekindles debate”

New York Times, “Obama Pushes for Increase in Federal Minimum Wage”

The Guardian, “Denying minimum-wage workers a raise is craven and grotesque”

Huffington Post, “Obama: Minimum Wage Increase Will Boost ‘Rising, Thriving Middle Class’”





Raise The Minimum Wage Day Of Action!

25 07 2012

The protest outside of the Chamber of Commerce office in Chicago!

On June 24th, hundreds of working people in Illinois gathered at the Thompson Center in downtown Chicago to demand a raise in the minimum wage!

There were similar protests held in other areas of Illinois, like Springfield and Peoria, as well as in many other cities all over the country!

June 24th was a day of action where working Americans united to take back our economy and demand a living wage for a hard day of work! Click here to see photos from rallies all over the country.

Minimum wage rally in Springfield, Illinois!

In Chicago, we marched from the Thompson Center to the Aon Center, where the Chicagoland Chamber of Commerce is located. The Chamber of Commerce has consistently opposed raising the minimum wage and uses its lobbying power in Springfield to stop legislation that would help workers. The Chicagoland Chamber of Commerce only looks out for the interests of big business and the 1%, so we showed up demonstrate the power of the 99% and to call for them to end their fight against increasing the minimum wage.

Minimum Wage worker Denise Brown explains the difficulty of making ends meet on $8.25 an hour

Please sign one or all of the petitions below to to show our Illinois and national legislators that working Americans support raising the minimum wage!

As a result of the June 24th Day of Action, the fight to raise the minimum wage has burst onto the headlines of major national news outlets. See some of the press coverage below:

New York Times, “Planning a March, and Envisioning a Movement, to Unite Low-Wage Workers”

MSNBC, “Top economists: Time to raise the minimum wage”

U.S. News, “An Increase in the Minimum Wage Is Long Overdue”

Forbes, “Women Need a Raise in the Minimum Wage”

Reuters, “Three years after last increase, business group calls for U.S. minimum wage hike”

Huffington Post, “Raising the Minimum Wage is Cheap and Easy”

The Washington Post, “Low-wage workers plan NYC protest march next week; part of actions planned around US”

Think Progress, “STUDY: One In Four Private Sector Workers Earn Less Than $10 An Hour”

Daily Kos, “Big companies employ two in three low-wage workers”

Huffington Post, “Want a Real Recovery? Raise the Minimum Wage”





Minimum Wage Voted Out of Senate Executive Committee!

17 05 2012

An increase in the Illinois Minimum Wage that has been championed by the Raise Illinois coalition advanced out of the Senate Executive Committee on May 16th, 2012!  The day after we had over 100 Raise Illinois members and minimum wage workers in Springfield lobbying for the bill to pass in a full Senate vote.

Please call, email and fax your State Senator today!
CLICK HERE to go to the District Locator to find out who your State Senator is and how to reach him/her.

We need as many people as possible to reach out to their Senators and voice a strong message for working families: Pass Senate Bill 1565 to raise the minimum wage in Illinois!

Once you have entered your address into the District Locator, click on the name of your State Senator and you will find their contact info. Calling their Springfield office is the most important, but you can call their District office as well.

Senator Kimberly Lightford, lead sponsor of SB 1565

Thanks to our sponsor, Senator Kimberly Lightford, and all the Democrats on the committee!  The bill, SB 1565, which would raise the minimum wage from $8.25/hour to over $10/hour in fifty cent per year increments by 2014, received the support of every Democrat and the opposition of every Republican.  If you want to reduce the extreme inequalities in our economy, you can help by taking action today.  Click here to find your Illinois legislators. We still need the bill to pass through the full Senate as well as the House of Representatives.

Minimum wage worker and grandmother Evalin Boblitt speaking about her struggle to raise the three grandchildren she takes care of on her own.

Below are links to some of the press coverage around the state.  The first one is an interview with a Springfield grandmother who is raising her three grandchildren on a minimum wage job as a dishwasher in a diner.

“Illinois Minimum Wage Bill Moves out of Committee” on CBS Channel 31 in Peoria

“Bill To Increase State Minimum Wage Moves Passes Out Of Committee” on WICS-TV

“IL Senate committee votes to send minimum-wage hike to the floor” in Illinois Statehouse News 

“Minimum Wage Bill Making Progress” on IllinoisHomepage.net

“Illinois legislature to consider increasing the minimum wage” in Daily American News

“State Senate Committee Approves Minimum Wage Hike” on CBS Chicago News  

“Illinois committee OKs higher minimum wage” in Peoria Journal Star

“Illinois Senate committee votes to send minimum-wage hike to the floor” on FOX Illinois

“Minimum wage proposal advances in Illinois” in Quad City Times

“Vote on $10 minimum wage goes to Ill. Senate floor” in The Southern Illinoisan

“Illinois Minimum Wage Could Be Raised Significantly” on WIBQ-FM Terre Haute Radio

 
“Illinois Minimum Wage Bill Advances” in Progress Illinois

“Bill increasing Illinois’ minimum wage moves forward” in STLToday.com





Minimum Wage In The News

3 05 2012

There was a recent blog post written by Edward McClellan for NBC Chicago titled, “Could You Make It On $10 An Hour?” In the post he calculates cost of living expenses and finds that it is nearly impossible to live on $10 an hour, much less the current minimum wage of $8.25! In the end he recommends, “Maybe they should go $12.50 an hour.”

Greg Kaufman wrote an article for The Nation called, “This Week In Poverty: Will The Poor Get Poorer In The Land Of Lincoln?” which fleshes out how low-income Illinois residents will be affected by budget cuts. He throws his support behind Senate Bill 1565, saying, “Finally, another piece of legislation in Illinois that would make a real difference in the lives of low-income people: a proposal to increase the minimum wage from $8.25 to $10.65 per hour over four years, and then index it to inflation. Tipped workers—currently paid only $4.95 per hour—would also be paid the new, full minimum wage. Currently, 100,000 state residents work full time, year-round, and still live below the poverty line, earning about $16,500 per year. The bill is expected to be voted on in committee next week. This is a critical moment for people living in poverty in Illinois—hard times could get a lot harder in the coming months. If you’re a state resident, contact your representatives—tell them to oppose reducing TANF eligibility to three years; oppose raising child care co-payments; support the supplemental appropriation to pay for TANF benefits; and support raising the minimum wage.

There is also an eye-opening infographic that is going viral about the wage gap in America called, “15 Facts About America’s Income Inequality” by Kristy Tillman. Below are some images from the infographic:

On Tuesday, May 1st, the Decatur Jobs Council voted to support Senate Bill 1565, our bill to raise the minimum wage. As the Herald-Review reported, “the jobs council voted to support Illinois Senate Bill 1565, which would tie the state’s minimum wage to increases in the cost of living. The bill was introduced by Sen. Kimberly Lightford, D-Westchester. Steve Simmons, statewide policy associate for the Chicago Jobs Council, also encouraged jobs council members to support the bill by participating in a rally day on May 17 at the state Capitol in Springfield. Darsonya Switzer, housing program director for Homeward Bound and chairwoman of the Decatur Jobs Council, said she planned to go and take some of her clients.”

Graphic from NELP report (Click to enlarge)

Last but not least, the National Employment Law Project (NELP) released a report, “Slower Wage Growth, Declining Real Wages Undermine Recovery,” that shows how working families continue to make less and less while corporations pull in record profits. The report also recommends raising the minimum wage as a way to address the decline in wages, “Prolonged, high unemployment continues to weaken wage growth for workers, undermining more vibrant economic recovery. The expansion of low-wage work and reduced earnings for those affected by the recession amplify these concerns. At the same time, even relatively weak wage growth is not reaching all workers. Raising and indexing the minimum wage begins to address the problem of low wages and boost economic recovery by stimulating demand and creating jobs.





Raise Illinois’ Letters To The Editor

25 04 2012

Raise Illinois members got three Letters to the Editor published in the Chicago Tribune (Sunday April, 22nd, 2012) in response to Steve Chapman’s editorial, “Minimum wage move is a mirage.”

You can read our Letters to the Editor by clicking here or clicking on the image below:

 





Campaign To Raise The Minimum Wage Gaining Momentum!

10 04 2012

New media and online updates circulating about increasing the minimum wage:

1. A recent article in the New York Times highlights several different campaigns around the country that are working to raise the minimum wage, including our efforts in Illinois!

Dan Cantor, Executive Director of the New York State Working Families Party, was quoted as saying, “The Occupy movement put inequality on the radar. If we’re serious as a society about poverty and work and decency, the minimum wage needs to eventually become a living wage.

2. There has been a popular graphic going viral that helps to illuminate just how impossible it is for a family to survive on minimum wage:

How Many Minimum Wage Hours Does It Take To Afford A Two-Bedroom Apartment In Your State?

In Illinois, a minimum wage earner must work 81 hours a week just to be able to afford a two bedroom apartment!

3. The Center for Economic Policy and Research released a new report on the minimum wage called, “Affording Health Care and Education on the Minimum Wage,” showing that it is nearly impossible for minimum wage workers to afford health insurance and college. As quoted in the report, “the current minimum wage looks even worse when compared to two kinds of purchases strongly associated with a middle-class standard of living or the ability to move up to the middle class: health insurance and a college degree.” The cost of these “middle-class” necessities under the current minimum wage is also compared with what the cost would have been under the minimum wage in 1980, which shows how sharply the minimum wage has decreased in value.

CEPR also released a new issue brief, which uses different benchmarks like Consumer Price Index, wages and productivity growth, to show that, “by any reasonable measure, there is a lot of room to increase the minimum wage above its current level.” When using productivity as a benchmark, the brief says that, “If the minimum wage had continued to move with average productivity after 1968, it would have reached $21.72 per hour in 2012 – a rate well above the average production worker wage. If minimum-wage workers received only half of the productivity gains over the period, the federal minimum would be $15.34. Even if the minimum wage only grew at one-fourth the rate of productivity, in 2012 it would be set at $12.25.





“Raise Illinois: Why I’m Going To Springfield”

30 01 2012

Rev. C.J. Hawking

In an article published in the Huffington Post, “Raise Illinois: Why I’m Going To Springfield Tomorrow,” Rev. C.J. Hawking, Executive Director of ARISE and member of the Raise Illinois coalition, explains why she is traveling to Springfield, with 67 other Raise Illinois members (20 of the clergy), to urge legislators to pass Senate Bill 1565, the bill to raise the minimum wage! At our press conference in the Captiol Rotunda, clergy will speak about why raising the minimum wage is morally just and economically sound. They will also unveil a scroll of over 200 faith leaders that have signed the Raise Illinois petition.

Hawking said, “Our various faith traditions teach us that just compensation is an essential human right for all workers and, as faith leaders, we believe that God calls us to share a vision of economic equality. This vision includes a wage rate that acknowledges the dignity of the workers, all of whom have been created in the image of God…. We recognize that some might say, ‘Now is not the time. This will stifle economic growth for the Illinois. This will increase our unemployment rate.’ Indeed, these are troubled economic times — making this precisely the right time to raise the minimum wage. Low-income families will spend that additional income on basic necessities in their local communities, thereby stimulating the economy, creating more jobs, and assisting in the overall economic recovery.”





Even Mitt Romney Supports Raising The Minimum Wage!

11 01 2012

Responding to a rope-line question at a campaign event on Saturday in Derry, New Hampshire, former Governor Mitt Romney stated that he favors raising the minimum wage automatically each year so that it keeps pace with inflation. Mr. Romney’s position breaks from conventional GOP opposition to raising the minimum wage.

When asked his position on the minimum wage, Mr. Romney said, “My view has been to allow the minimum wage to rise with the CPI [Consumer Price Index] or with another index so that it adjusts automatically over time….  I already indicated that when I was governor of Massachusetts and that’s my view.”
Whoa! Well if Mitt Romney can support raising the minimum wage, it should be a no-brainer for Illinois Democrats!

Watch video:





We’re Next!

12 12 2011

Starting January 1, 2012, San Francisco will become the first city in the nation that has a minimum wage above $10 an hour! A 32-cent hike will push the hourly pay to $10.24.

If they can do it, so can we! Click here to find out ways you can help!