Taveras: prefers state-based minimum wage but open to hotel proposal


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Providence Mayor Angel Taveras at Netroots Nation. (Photo by Bob Plain)
Providence Mayor Angel Taveras at Netroots Nation. (Photo by Bob Plain)

Providence Mayor Angel Taveras “believes it is better to raise the wage at the state level but is open to the proposed ordinance before the City Council,” said campaign spokeswoman Dawn Bergantino today.

“The City of Seattle spent months studying the issue before the recent passage of a citywide wage,” she said. “The Mayor believes it is equally important that Providence do an economic impact study to understand what, if any, consequence we may see and to ensure the proposal will help those it is intended to, in the way it is intended to. He wants to make sure that we have an economy that is fair and provides opportunity to everyone.”

The statement comes as the mayor may have to weigh in on a $15 minimum wage for the hotel industry in Providence, as activists have put a proposal before the City Council, and as Rep. Ray Gallison is pushing a bill that would block cities and towns from having higher minimum wages than the state.

Bergantino said Taveras did not ask House Finance Committee Chairman Ray Gallison to put forward a bill that would prevent cities and towns from setting their own minimum wage.

It’s still unclear why Gallison, chairman of the powerful House Finance Committee, proposed the bill as he prepares to lead the budget bill through his committee. House spokesman Larry Berman said he didn’t know what prompted Gallison to support the move, which is usually associated with conservative low wage activists.

DSC_8223Providence City Councilor Carmen Castillo, who is also a hotel housekeeper, took umbrage with Gallison meddling in city politics.

“Representative Gallison’s proposal is an attack on all RI cities and towns,” she said in an email to RI Future. “It will strip us of our power to represent our communities. What power will they try to take from us next?  The right to decide if we should have a casino in our town?  The right to set our own budgets?”

Castillo, who works at the Omni Hotel, added, “I make almost $15 per hour.  I proudly clean 15 hotel rooms a day for Providence tourists – guests from graduations and conventions, tourists on their way to Cape Cod  and business travelers all sleep in clean rooms because of hundreds of women like me.  I was able to buy a house and send my daughters to college.  I eat in my neighborhood restaurants and shop in the bodegas.”

Councilman Sam Zurier said he wasn’t familiar enough with Gallison’s bill to weigh in. But he reiterated what he has written in his constituent newsletter:

“I have an open mind on this issue, and I will attend the hearing looking for answers to several questions, including the following: (1) What is the current wage scale at Providence hotels, including those that have unions?; (2) What is a living wage for Providence?; (3) What are the costs/benefits of (a) a minimum wage at the municipal (rather than state or national) level, and (b) an industry-specific minimum wage?; (4) What ramifications would the ordinance have for other hotel employees, such as those employed in a hotel restaurant or gift shop, and what would be the full impact on room rates and hotel operations?”

Housekeeper Santa Brito: ‘House leadership is moving to jail us in poverty’


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Santa Brito and child

“House leadership is moving to jail us in poverty,” said Santa Brito, a housekeeper at the Renaissance Hotel. “We are hard working mothers and the backbone of the Providence tourism industry, fighting to send our kids from Head Start to Harvard.”

Brito was responding to Rep. Ray Gallison’s 11th-hour bill that would prevent cities and towns from setting their own minimum wage. A House spokesman said Gallison’s proposal was a response to the hotel employees who have asked the Providence City Council to set a $15 industry minimum wage.

It’s unclear what motivated Gallison, a Democrat, to propose this kind of bill, which is widely considered a conservative legislative tactic to keep wages low.

Here’s Brito’s full statement, sent to me today:

“We are hard working mothers and the backbone of the Providence tourism industry, fighting to send our kids from Head Start to Harvard. 65% of Providence voters believe we should make $15 per hour, just about $1.85 more per room we clean.  This week we started collecting the final round of signatures to put the $15 hotel worker minimum wage on the ballot.  Providence voters are welcoming us at their door steps.   Now, House leadership is moving to jail us in poverty. What does this mean for the future of our kids?

Preemptive laws against municipal minimum wages: ALEC idea


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alecHouse Finance Committee Chairman Ray Gallison’s new bill to remove local control of minimum wage laws is akin to a corporate-funded effort across the country to suppress living wage protections. The tactic is known as passing “preemption laws” and it’s been tied back to the American Legislative Exchange Council, or ALEC, the right wing bill mill that drafts corporate-friendly legislation for state legislators.

“Business-backed groups that oppose living wages and paid leave have a serious problem on their hands: polls show that they’re popular,” according to (Bill) Moyers and Company in a report on Oklahoma’s new living wage restrictions. “So-called preemption laws provide them with a solution.”

ALEC-sponsored “preemptive laws” are often cited when it comes to paid leave bills (see here, here and here). A 2013 Economic Policy Institute study by Gordon Lafer (The Legislative Attack on American Wages and Labor Standards) says ALEC suggests that legislators from left-leaning states introduce bills that stop minimum wages from being enacted at the municipal level.

“In many states, big cities are more progressive than the state as a whole. As a result, as of 2010, 123 cities or counties had adopted ordinances mandating minimum wages, living wages, or prevailing wages higher than the state standard,” Lafer writes. “To combat such initiatives, ALEC’s minimum-wage repeal bill abolishes any existing local minimum-wage laws in addition to the state statute itself, and forbids localities from enacting wage laws in the future.”

Gallison, a Bristol Democrat, introduced an amendment to the state minimum wage law on Wednesday that would prohibit cities and towns from enacting minimum wage laws. His amendment reads: “No municipality shall establish, mandate, or otherwise require an employer to pay a minimum wage to its employees, other than the state or federal mandated minimum wage, or to apply a state or federal minimum wage law to wages statutorily exempt from a state or federal minimum wage requirement.”

House Spokesman Larry Berman told WPRI’s Dan McGowan the proposal is a reaction to a $15 hotel industry minimum wage before the Providence City Council. Gallison, who isn’t and wasn’t an ALEC member, supports a much smaller increase to the state minimum wage. He did not say why he wants to limit cities and towns from setting their own rate.

Rep Gallison proposes state control of municipal minimum wages


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gallisonWhat could be more threatening to the status quo than a group of low paid workers, mostly women and many of them working mothers, petitioning their government for a living wage? Perhaps Representative Raymond E. Gallison, Jr., a putative Democrat from District 69 covering Bristol/Portsmouth can provide an answer. Gallison introduced House Bill 8276 yesterday, and act to “prevent municipalities from establishing their own minimum wage requirements for employees within their geographic borders.”

Gallison is the the chair of the House Committee on Finance, but the bill has been submitted to House Labor, chaired by Representative Joseph Shekarchi. Gallison  has a problematic and far from progressive voting record. He has voted for the “choose life” license plate, and voter ID, voted in favor of of last year’s budget and supported the pension reform/theft that will prove to be so effective.

On Twitter, channel 12 reporter Dan McGowan reported that house spokesman Larry Berman told him that “Gallison is actually looking to raise statewide min wage slightly, but doesn’t want cities setting own rates.” When Sam Howard asked about Gallison’s motives, McGowan couldn’t speculate, but reported that Berman confirmed that this bill is in response to the hotel workers.

McGowan Berman Howard Gallison
This makes a cruel kind of sense. A group of working women who can’t get the Providence City Council and Mayor Taveras to treat them with respect should expect no less from a General Assembly more interested in cutting the estate tax for the richest Rhode Islanders than in doing anything substantive for the poorest.

Pro 15 18In Rhode Island we are suffering under a General Assembly that actively disdains the working class and the working poor. With the doors to the State House effectively closed to them, workers have no other option than to appeal to their local city and town councils in search of some relief. What this bill does is effectively slam yet another door in the faces of these working mothers, cutting off another avenue of possible relief, and accruing more power to the leaders of the General Assembly.

This bill is a ridiculous and callous power grab, an affront to the democratic process and a slap in the face to anyone who seeks to lawfully petition their government for relief from brutal and oppressive working conditions.

(As of this writing Representative Gallison has declined to respond to my emails seeking clarification.)