Minimum Wage public hearingI am cosponsoring Mayor Murray’s minimum wage legislation because it’s time for cities to demonstrate bold and necessary leadership to address the stagnation of wages that has plagued our country for decades.

Why does this matter?

An economy where the wealthiest grow exceedingly richer while the poor and middle class experience a real decline in earning power rips apart our social fabric. The growing income and wealth inequality in our country is a dangerous trend.

As someone who started and grew a business for 20 years, I want to see individuals and businesses achieve success, provide meaningful work to their employees and produce goods and services that benefit their communities. I cringe at some of the rhetoric that demeans and disparages those who have achieved such success. But I also believe everyone should have a shot at that success and, today, for many reasons, a lot of people are being left out.

Low wage earners in our city and region struggle to support themselves or raise a family with a sense of economic stability and hope. This reality is not good for anyone.

Ideally, this issue would be addressed at the federal and state level, but it hasn’t been and likely won’t be anytime soon. So, as is often the case, cities like Seattle need to step up and lead.

Mayor Murray’s minimum wage legislation is a workable and careful compromise that recognizes both the harm caused by stagnant wages and the harm to local businesses should we move forward too quickly. Our homegrown small businesses provide much of the neighborhood character that we cherish in Seattle, and the Mayor’s compromise gives smaller businesses—and those offering other benefits—more time to phase in the increase.

As a cosponsor, I am expressing my strong support for the foundations of this historic proposal. At the same time, the Council has an important role to ask questions, clarify details, and listen to the public. The Council has held seven public meetings on this topic and more are scheduled over the next few weeks.

It is also important to me that we don’t start to believe that raising the minimum wage is all that matters. It’s not.

Education matters. Earlier today, Mayor Murray and I announced the details of our Seattle Preschool Program, an evidence-based, high-quality effort to prepare our children to enter kindergarten ready to learn. Making sure all our kids have a strong and fair start in school is another great step to address economic stagnation.

Crime and neighborhood safety matters. While overall crime in Seattle is relatively low, there are pockets of our city where crime is a frequent and persistent problem.  Crime is geographically anchored, often where our most vulnerable, poor and disenfranchised people live. Seattle’s next police chief must implement effective policing strategies, in close partnership with residents and businesses that identify the most harmful people and places and put an end to the crime and disorder that holds neighborhoods back from achieving their potential.

Transportation matters. Earlier this week, Mayor Murray recommended sending a funding package to the November ballot to preserve Metro bus service. An almost identical revenue package was approved by 66% of Seattle voters two weeks ago, but failed county-wide. If passed by Seattle voters in November, the money raised will be used exclusively for transit services. Efficient public transit is essential for economic growth and especially important for low-wage earners who often can’t afford any other means of transportation.

Addressing these important matters—education, crime, transportation—along with the minimum wage will help Seattle address the opportunity gap that exists today for so many.


Comments

8 responses to “Why I’m Sponsoring the Minimum Wage Legislation”

  1. Jeff Saily Avatar
    Jeff Saily

    As a small business owner, I am totally disgusted with our Seattle City Council. First you pass a law requiring us to pay sick pay to all of our employees and now you pass this ridiculous $15 minimum wage law. It is clear to me that our mayor and the Seattle City Council are anti-small business and do not care how much you hurt us. You will most certainly put many of of us out of business. I promise to NEVER vote for you ever again! DISGUSTING!

  2. Leslie Jordan Avatar
    Leslie Jordan

    As a part-time worker making less than $15.00 at most of my jobs (that together don’t equal full-time), I appreciate efforts to raise the minimum wage. However, I would also urge extra consideration for those who are working part-time. I’ve heard that due to the Affordable Care Act some employers are dodging requirements to provide health insurance by only hiring part-time workers. Many low wage workers are also part-time workers. Being paid low-wages and not working full time makes it really, really difficult to afford the necessities of life, especially in an expensive city.

  3. TM Avatar
    TM

    I do not share your confidence about the $15 minimum wage. It was initiated by an acknowledged socialist and therefore is not grounded in any way sound economic principles. The only way this is at all palatable is that most people – not you – are labeling this as an “experiment” — an experiment where the outcome is not known. I very much support the idea that government is in place to provide it’s citizens with a “safety net” and not in place to provide a theoretical standard of living.

  4. Travis Avatar
    Travis

    Government imposed price fixing only hurts our economy and usually the people it claims it will benefit. Price controls on gasoline caused a shortage of fuel in the 70’s and people who needed gas couldn’t get it at any price. Rent controls lead to a black market for subletting. A 60% increase in minimum wages will result in fewer jobs. Small business owners are not greedily making money on the backs of low wage people. Competition drives them to pass on lower prices to consumers. When the cost to deliver a service goes up, prices will go up and consumers will consume less. That means fewer jobs. It’s really simple. I have a hard time believing that our city council is this ignorant. Also want to believe they are not this cruel, but they must be one or the other.

  5. Michael Soloman Avatar
    Michael Soloman

    Councilman / Comrade:
    You state: I am cosponsoring Mayor Murray’s minimum wage legislation because it’s time for cities to demonstrate bold and necessary leadership to address the stagnation of wages that has plagued our country for decades.
    Leadership? Taking from those that earn and redistributing to folks you “believe” deserve it is just more soviet seattle socialist silliness. If you want to stop the devasting stagnation of wages, peer over at North Dakota where over-taxation and over-regulation are yet to be manifested. Starting FREE MARKET wages are higher than your $15 for a reason. Jobs outnumber people so this is what happens. Keynesian economics and socialism did not create the highest standard of living ever to exist on Earth. Freedom and free markets (while certainly not perfect) did that. You are going the WRONG direction if you wish to end wage stagnation with more soviet socialist dictates – guaranteed.

  6. Cliff Estes Avatar
    Cliff Estes

    From each according to his ability to each according to his need. Sound Familiar? It should. It’s the foundation of the failed Soviet experiment.
    Socialism has failed many times through history and will again when Seattle becomes the next Detroit.

  7. Battery Bob Avatar
    Battery Bob

    The forced minimum wage is against the Constitution.
    The free enterprise system can pay much more than that.
    If a person is earning $10 an hour and you force the employer to pay $15 dollars per that is a 50% pay raise.
    A $5 pay raise x 40 hours is $200 a week x 4 weeks a month then you are forcing the employer to pay an extra
    $800 EVERY MONTH for every employee. Rather than force the employer to pay an extra $800 every month what if the employer cosigned a one time LOAN of only $550 so that the employee could receive an extra $1,000 every month. This is a loan that the employee must repay. The loan can come from a bank, credit union, the government, a foundation, or any other source of money. The loan will not cost the employer one penny. The loan will be repaid within 2 months and then that money can be recycled to create a perpetual flow of money to provide a loan for everyone. Every person that desires to participate is guaranteed an extra income as long as they don’t quit.
    With in a short time all employees will be earning over
    $15 dollars an hour and will not force the employer out of business and it is within the guide lines of the Constitution of the United States.
    TYRANNY or FREEDOM the choice is yours.
    Battery Bob, I jump $tart peoples lives with HOPE!
    freedom@bob-miller.ws
    253-517-8698

  8. George Avatar
    George

    As a small business owner, I deplore once again, government trying to right their perception of social wrongs with policies like this. $15/hr is a very tidy number but has anyone on the council given any thought to how this will affect entry level jobs and the unemployment rate for teenagers, particularly minorities? Do you really expect small businesses to absorb the 50% increase in their labor costs or just pass it on to consumers? I will make a prediction that once this failed policy is seen for what it is, the government will come to its senses and lower taxes, reduce regulations that stifle business creation and expansion and create a truly sustainable recovery in employment that will make everyone happy. Attempting something like this when the economy is this weak is just making matters worse.

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