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Thursday, May 25, 2006

BREAKING: Minimum wage advances in NC

Today, the North Carolina House voted 68 to 39 to pass a $1 increase in the state's minimum wage. Also today, the state Senate also voted in favor of an identical increase in their 2006-2007 budget, although the measure was tied to cuts in sales taxes and income taxes for the wealthiest 2% of North Carolinians.

The campaign, led by North Carolinians for Fair Wages, isn't over. The House will do another reading of the bill next week, and the Senate will decide whether it will vote for the minimum wage bill on its own, or will include it in a budget package that the House and Senate must agree on later.

That leaves time for lobbying, as the NC Justice Center reports:
Small business associations were working hard to defeat the bill or at least to get tax cuts in return – and we may still see future bills which do this. But Many House members spoke in strong favor of the bill and the immediate need of low-wage workers to earn a better wage.
So much could still happen. But today's events send a strong signal that North Carolina may well join 20 other states in filling the vacuum of federal inaction, and give the state's lowest-paid workers a boost.
posted by Chris Kromm at 4:14 PM | Email this post | Post a Comment
1 Comments:
Anonymous Brock Haussamen said...

I'm in New Jersey but I've been following NC's minimum wage campaign with interest (my Web site www.raiseminwage.org includes information and opinion on state and fed minwages). I don't know if this has been mentioned before here, but the federal Bureau of Labor statistics for minwage workers in 2005 includes the following: a total of 2,176,000 hourly wage workers in NC; 45,000 of them earned less than $5.15 (including tipped employees and those who rounded off their wage to $5.00); 13,000 reported earning exactly $5.15. The total of 58,000 constitutes 3.1 percent of all US workers at $5.15 or less. Within NC, it constitutes 2.7 percent of all wage workers in the state. (Nothing here about wages above $5.15, such as a poverty wage of $6 per hour.)

Brock Haussamen

5/26/2006 10:52 AM  

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CHRIS KROMM blogs three days a week for Facing South. Chris is Executive Director of the Institute for Southern Studies and publisher of the Institute’s award-winning magazine, Southern Exposure.

SUE STURGIS blogs four days a week for Facing South. Sue is the Institute’s Editorial Director and a former reporter for The Independent Weekly and The Raleigh News & Observer.

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