Rhode Island fast food workers arrested in Hartford


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Thirteen fast food workers were arrested during a civil disobedience action in Hartford yesterday, seven of them were from Rhode Island. Here’s my story:

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Charles under arrest

“Do you have any sharp items in your pocket?” asked the police officer.

“No,” said Charles, a forty year old black man wearing his Burger King uniform. Charles, who I had met long before he was involved with the fight to secure a living wage for fast food workers, is always polite.

“Do you have any medical issues?”

“No.”

“Okay. I’m placing you under arrest.”

Charles stood up, placed his hands behind his back and, after the plastic cuffs were fastened, was escorted to the waiting police van. With that, the Fight for a $15 minimum wage officially entered it’s civil disobedience phase.

DSC_0600Some variation of this routine played out 12 more times around noon on Thursday in front of a McDonald’s restaurant in Hartford. More than half of those arrested were from Rhode Island. Six of the Rhode Islanders work in the same Wendy’s in Warwick. The rest were from Hartford, and at least two of them worked in the same McDonalds they were protesting.

DSC_1286“I’ve never seen security guards at that McDonalds before,” said a worker at the discussion held after the action was over, “they were wearing black suits and sunglasses and everything.” I had to agree. They looked more like the Men in Black than mall-level rent-a-cops.

“Shows that they have money…” said someone.

“…and they don’t know how to spend it,” laughed another.

DSC_1632McDonalds left the actual arresting of the protesters to the Hartford cops, not private security. One by one the thirteen fast food workers were loaded into a hot and stuffy police van. Despite not having any medical issues of which he was aware, Stacey, a twenty something black man and Providence native in a Wendys uniform, started having a seizure. By the time the police van arrived at the makeshift booking site a couple blocks away, Stacey needed an ambulance, and was taken to the hospital.

The Fight for a $15 minimum wage has been slowly gaining traction and scoring significant victories over the last year. Seattle recently passed a $15 minimum wage and San Francisco and Chicago may soon follow. The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) ruled that the McDonalds Corporation is a “joint employer” with its franchisees, making the restaurant corporation responsible for “illegally firing, threatening or otherwise penalizing workers for their pro-labor activities,” according to the New York Times, a decision that may make unionizing fast food workers easier.

Not bad for a nascent movement that has so far relied on one day strikes and picket lines to get its message across, but corporate interests are starting to hit back. The deep-pocketed McDonalds Corporation, a longtime opponent of unions,  claims the NLRB ruling goes against “decades of established law” and is expected to appeal the ruling all the way to the Supreme Court, if need be. Meanwhile, several states, including Oklahoma and Rhode Island, have passed measures preventing cities from setting their own minimum wage ordinances.

Recognizing that the battleground is shifting, the largest gathering of fast food workers to date met outside Chicago in late July, and unanimously decided “to conduct a wave of civil disobedience actions.” Sponsored by the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), the driving theme of the meeting was that the Fight for $15 was the latest in a long line of civil rights battles that prioritized economic justice. Representative Keith Ellison, (D-MN), no stranger to civil rights battles as the first Muslim American in Congress, explicitly spelled this out when he said to the crowd, “What you are doing right now is the most important workers’ movement in America today.”

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Samuel Velez

“‘We talked a lot about civil disobedience,’ Samuel Velez, a McDonalds employee from Hartford, said. “What we’re doing; fighting for our rights is really important. It was very good that a whole bunch of workers came together as one and spoke about what we’re going to do next, and that we got feedback about how we’re doing.’”

—-

Stacey, Reggie, Corey, Jo Ann, Charles, Staria and Kenya
Stacey, Reggie, Corey, Jo Ann, Charles, Staria and Kenya

The drive from Providence to Hartford is nearly silent. There are seven fast food workers in the rental van with me and the mood is contemplative. In addition to Charles and Stacey, I’m driving with Jo Ann, Staria, Reggie, Kenya and Corey.

“Everybody’s so quiet,” says Jo Ann, a Wendys worker.

“Maybe people are nervous about being arrested,” I suggest. I also suspect that the group is being less boisterous in the presence of media.

“Maybe,” says Jo Ann, “but most of us just finished a full day of work and we’re just tired.”

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Jo Ann

Jo Ann has the heart of an activist, and she’s a natural leader. She became involved in this effort because at her job, everyone received a ten cents per hour raise, “whether they deserved it or not. Good worker or bad, you got ten cents. It wasn’t fair, and it meant hard work was meaningless.” Then, shortly after the raise, and adding injury to insult, the employees all had their hours cut by a third. Jo Ann went from just over thirty hours a week to just over twenty. The cut in hours obliterated the paltry pay increase.

Unhappy with the treatment she and her fellow fast food workers were receiving Jo Ann went online and started to look up her rights as a fast food employee living in Rhode Island. She quickly learned that the laws in Rhode Island had almost nothing to say about her right to be treated fairly by her employer. At this point she began searching the internet for alternatives. This is how she discovered the nascent Fight for $15 movement and the SEIU. It wasn’t long before Jo Ann was talking about fair treatment and fair pay to her co-workers, and not long after that she found herself walking the picket line.

Early on, Jo Ann could have left her job at Wendys. “I was looking around, and found a job as a manager at a McDonald’s. I was offered the job over the phone, but I turned it down, because even though it meant more pay and more hours, I would have been leaving behind all the friends I had made at my Wendys.”

Staria
Staria

Jo Ann likes her job. She likes meeting people, likes her co-workers and likes serving food to hungry customers, but she isn’t being paid enough to live on, and as tough as the low pay is for her, it can be much worse for her co-workers. Jo Ann stays because she feels a sense of responsibility to her co-workers, and its obvious that her co-workers think a lot of her. “How could anyone not like Jo Ann,” says Staria, a young black woman and co-worker, “she’s like the nicest person ever.”

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Charles

Charles often has to decide between buying medicine or paying his rent. This despite the fact that Charles has a job, albeit one that doesn’t pay him enough to live on. “I’ve been working at Burger King for ten years, and I’m still making minimum,” says Charles. Meanwhile, some of the managers, claims Charles, make $25 an hour plus benefits. Charles is one of the nicest people you could meet. I ask him if he’s nervous about being arrested. He’s not.

“When it happens it happens,” says Charles.

The fast food workers will get some training in nonviolence and civil disobedience before the first action, scheduled for 10:30 at a nearby Burger King. They will learn how to be arrested in a way that will prevent them from getting hurt or incurring charges of resisting arrest as they are (hopefully) booked and released. During their training the workers will be encouraged to express themselves freely, without fear of judgement.

“I’ve been getting arrested every month since 1972,” jokes Steve, who will be training the workers on how to get arrested. When asked about the cops, Steve is reassuring, “These guys here in Hartford are very cool. They have a lot of experience and they don’t mess with us.”

Ben, the SEIU organizer running the action in Hartford, doesn’t want me at the training, because the workers should be free to express their concerns with some measure of privacy.  I’m cool with that, but I also get the impression that he doesn’t trust the press. “We’ve been attacked from the left,” says Ben, confirming my hunch. I don’t argue for access, I’m sure I’ll have plenty to write about.

Appearing at the Comfort Inn breakfast buffet, where the Providence contingent is gathered, Ben enthuses, “Today is going to be fucking awesome!” He has just heard from his people in Rhode Island that a strike notice has been delivered through the drive thru window of the Warwick Wendys to the manager on duty. Upon hearing what that it was a strike notice, the manager reportedly refused to touch the paper. Pretty much the entire lunch crew is in Hartford, leaving Wendys in Warwick with no workers for the afternoon.

The two most important things these workers need for today’s actions are their uniforms, which will instantly mark them as fast food workers, and their identification cards, to make it easier for the police to process them after their arrest.

Getting arrested is the plan. One day strikes have had the impact they’re going to have, and it’s time to take the Fight for $15 to the next level, goes the logic. There’s no reason for the police to be angry or agitated. This should be a simple book and release, but of course the ongoing scandal of Ferguson is all over the news, and good number of the fast food workers involved in these actions are people of color.

“The majority of people in Hartford are black or Puerto Rican,” says Steve, explaining that the cops are wary of coming off like Ferguson. Hartford has its own police brutality controversy currently making its way through the courts in the tasering of teenager Luis Anglero. Police across the country know that the world will be watching them during these civil disobedience actions. There are reportedly 150 cities involved today and it will be covered by all the news channels, so the cops will be on their best behavior.

As if to confirm the attention being focused on today’s actions, the Today Show runs a short piece as the workers make there way to their training.

DSC_0769At 10am about thirty fast food workers and supporters march inside the Burger King next door to the Comfort Inn, chanting and waving signs. The manager on duty says, “if you come in here I’m calling the police,” but she is ignored. The protesters ask the staff of the restaurant to join them in their chants, but none do. Mostly they look nervous as they try to fill customer orders.

DSC_0826A few customers evidence annoyance at the protest, but most seemed pleased by the show. At least one customer joined in with the chants. The protesters quieted only long enough to catch the tail end of a CNN report about today’s planned civil disobedience actions. There was laughter at this. The protesters exited the restaurant chanting, “We’ll be back!” As the vans pulled out of the Burger King parking lot, the police arrived.

DSC_0835Unlike the contemplative ride from Providence the night before, the atmosphere in the van as we traveled from the Burger King near the hotel to the McDonalds in Hartford was electric. The first taste of protest had energized the group and they were ready for more. I found out that Jo Ann had attended the big meeting in Chicago where fast food workers had decided to engage in civil disobedience. Today’s actions are the first since she helped to decide on the direction this cause is going to take in the future. Staria is sorry to have missed the Chicago meet. She enjoys the unity and community this drive for fair wages has provided her..

DSC_0937As we pulled into the parking lot that would serve as the staging area for the march to the McDonalds, everyone noticed that the cops were already out in force. Across the street were about seven cops, huddled together in conversation. More joined them. Local community leaders, labor leaders and labor friendly politicians had announced the fast food workers’ intentions to the police, and the cops were there to direct traffic ahead of the march.

Speeches were given and there were rallying cries for solidarity. The best speeches, as usual, came from the workers themselves.

“I’m fighting for 15 for my son but not only for my son but for everyone else who is scared to come out and fight with us,” said Samuel Velez to the crowd.

Salvador Lopez spoke of being fired for his unionization efforts, and getting his job back with the help of union representatives. Both Samuel and Salvador work at the McDonalds they are planning to protest.

DSC_1044I followed the quarter mile march and was pleased to see the positive reaction from many on the street. Many people joined the march, including a young mother pushing a baby stroller. There were drummers and chants lead by the Reverend A.J. Johnson, who seemed to be giving a crash course in how to energize a crowd. The man was tireless and his energy was infectious.

DSC_1284When we arrived at the McDonalds, the chanting crowd pushed its way into the restaurant, taking over the space for a good amount of time before moving outside, marching around the building and finally stopping at the front of the store, where the thirteen brave volunteers sat down to be arrested in an act of civil disobedience.

The officer in charge listened to the chanting crowd, and then asked the seated protesters to get out of the street. Politely, the protesters refused. The crowd cheered the arrestees on in various call and respond chants. Twice more the officer in charge asked the volunteer arrestees to get out of the street. Twice more they refused.

DSC_1670Calmly, one by one, the thirteen protesters were told that they were under arrest, asked to stand, and taken to the waiting police van. When the van was full the last three of the thirteen were taken away by police cars. The action over, the crowd dispersed.

I went to the staging area a few blocks away where the police were booking and releasing the protesters. Most of them were already free, a few were still receiving their tickets for “disorderly conduct.” It was when I got there that I learned about Stacey, and that he had suffered a seizure in the police van. Kenya had accompanied him to the hospital.

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Stacey

I learned later that Stacey was suffering from dehydration. The entire event had been outside in the hot sun, and in truth none of us had taken the time to eat much of anything since breakfast. Being locked inside the hot and stuffy police van was enough to send Stacey over the edge, but ultimately he was fine and the hospital released him that afternoon.

In the aftermath of the day’s events, the workers and the organizers gathered to review their efforts. On the TV, Fox News reads a statement from the National Restaurant Association, (the other NRA) which declares that the nationwide protests are “a national, multi-million dollar campaign engineered, organized and funded by national labor groups. The activities have proven to be orchestrated union PR events where the vast majority of participants are activists and paid demonstrators.”

DSC_1723There were certainly allies and organizers at the events Hartford, but the majority were clearly fast food workers. I look at Jo Ann, who found this movement on the Internet while working at a tiny fast food joint in Warwick, Rhode Island. She isn’t a paid activist, she’s someone committed to fighting for fair wages and a decent working environment for everyone. To everyone in the room, the NRA statement is obvious baloney.

The workers, those who were arrested and those who cheered them on, enjoyed the air conditioning and the pizza as they listened to reports coming in from bigger actions in Chicago and Detroit. Over 100 protesters were arrested in Detroit. Rumor has it that the police ran out of handcuffs.

This was a big action, and the publicity and the exposure, plus the positive experiences of the participants, has everyone eager to do more. Future actions are being planned, and the contingent from Rhode Island is eager to be involved. They don’t want to just fight for $15, they want to win it.

Kenya
Kenya

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Reverend A.J. Johnson

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Reggie’s ticket for “disorderly conduct”

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Hotel worker interviews are required reading


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Santa Brito

Though the first round of the Fight for a $15 minimum wage appears to be over, due to the anti-democratic efforts of a right-wing General Assembly more concerned with feathering the beds of the rich and entitled than easing the burden of the poor and disenfranchised, the hotel workers targeted by the Mattiello budget are not going away or shutting up. A pair of interviews over at Bluestockings Magazine, a Brown University based publication writing “about issues from a gender aware perspective” has given voice to hotel workers Santa Brito and Miguelina Almanazar.

Both have been vocal leaders in the fight for fair and decent wages, and their interviews need to be more widely read.

Miguelina Almanazar

When asked about the General Assembly’s pre-emptive move to prevent the hotel workers from achieving a $15 minimum wage, Almanazar said, “The truth is, we were expecting it because this is what the state and the state politicians always do. Whenever we’re asking for something, they always take the side of the rich. When we’re entering bankruptcy, they raise the taxes on our houses. When something is wrong, the minority has to pay for that. They never want to invest in the minority. They never want to invest in poor people, and that is what we are. So the truth is, we were expecting it, and so it doesn’t have us down. We are going to keep fighting it, and we are going to change the law.

Santa Brito, who once said that “House leadership is moving to jail us in poverty” is at her direct and uncompromising best, saying, “The truth is, I’m really mad, because these are people that are supposed to be providing for us, and in fact what they’re doing is denying us opportunity when we’re just trying to provide for ourselves. We’ve taken it upon ourselves to provide for our families and now they’re just trying to block us. And, the truth is, that if they don’t do their job and provide for us, then we are going to have no other option but to take to the streets to try and reclaim the rights they are trying to take from us.”

These are important interviews from important Rhode Island women that deserve the widest possible audience.

Hunger strikers helped win $9 minimum wage for all


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Hunger Strikers hear that Governor Chafee signed the budget.

With  a stroke of his pen Governor Chafee signed into law the 2015 budget, marking what House Speaker Nick Mattiello endlessly referred  to as a new era in regional “competitiveness” for Rhode Island. Simultaneously the Governor dashed the hopes of Providence hotel workers who were cavalierly targeted by a measure inserted into the bill that eliminated the ability of cities and towns in the state from deciding their own minimum wages.

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Governor Chafee

While the governor, Senate President Paiva-Weed and the Speaker were inside the State House giving self-congratulatory speeches about the bold new budget and the bold new economic direction the state was taking, outside the State House Mirjaam Parada, Yilenny Ferrares, Santa Brito and Shelby Maldonado continued their hunger strike, hoping to convince the governor to veto.

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House Speaker Mattiello

Were the efforts of the hotel workers and the hunger strikers ultimately futile? I think not. Both houses of the General Assembly just passed a bill to raise the minimum wage to $9 in 2015. Given the priorities of the Mattiello House this year, in which lowering estate and corporate taxes was seen as more important than helping the economically vulnerable, and given the open hostility some legislators had evinced towards the idea of raising the minimum wage so soon after the last increase, the $9 minimum wage is an important victory.

It was only the efforts of the hotel workers and the hunger strikers that shamed members of the General Assembly into doing something akin to the right thing for minimum wage workers. In fact, I heard rumors yesterday that the only way the Senate would approve Mattiello’s corporate kiss-up budget was for the Speaker to see his way clear to a slight increase in the minimum wage, but of course the exact mechanisms by which the legislature conducts its business are always hidden from public view.

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Senate President Paiva-Weed

Even as the Mattiello budget was signed into law and the $9 minimum wage was passed in Rhode Island, the Massachusetts legislature, in a move lauded by President Obama, acted to raise its state’s minimum wage to $11 an hour. (Note to Rhode Islanders: This is how real Democrats behave.) For all of Speaker Mattiello’s talk of being regionally competitive, the failure to set our state’s minimum wage to a similar standard demonstrates a lack of economic understanding and leadership. Following the economic logic on evidence at the State House, one should now expect the best minimum wage workers in Pawtucket and East Providence to cross the border into Massachusetts for the $11 an hour fast food jobs, leaving the $9 jobs here in Rhode Island to the second tier workers. The extra $80 a week will be worth the extra five to ten minutes it will take to get to work in the morning for most workers.

Budget architect Ray Gallison
Budget architect Ray Gallison

The hotel workers here in Providence were fighting for $15. They fought and won here in the city, only to have the state come in and snatch victory from their grasp. At that point, the fight switched from a battle for fair wages to a battle for access to democracy. It was only the efforts of the hunger strikers and their supporters, calling attention to the miscarriage of justice and the abuse of legislative power, that shamed the General Assembly into doing anything to alleviate the suffering of the most economically vulnerable.

Mirjaam Parada, Yilenny Ferrares, Santa Brito and Shelby Maldonado are heroes of democracy, bravely showing the way forward in the fight for economic justice in Rhode Island. But more than that, they are just good, kindhearted people, putting the concerns of others ahead of their own. I am better for knowing them, and glad there are such people working to make the world a better place.

Their hunger strike is over, and I can’t wait to see what they’ll come up with next.

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Hotel hunger strike begins as Senate quickly passes budget


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DSC_9728In response to the quick passage of the Mattiello budget by the Rhode Island Senate last night, the Providence hotel workers advocating for a $15 minimum wage had to quickly begin their hunger strike protest earlier today. The women participating in the hunger strike were interviewed by a doctor about their medical histories and given advice on how to best deal with the stresses a lack of food was going to inflict on their bodies.

Dr. Nick Tsiongas was not in any way advising that these women go on a hunger strike, but given that they were committed to this course of action, did offer some advice on how to do so in the safest possible way.

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Dr. Tsiongas and Mirjaam Parada

Shortly after Dr. Tsiongas talked to the women and to me on camera, word came down from the State House facilities department that the tents being used by the women to keep themselves out of the hot sun had to come down. Unbrellas and folding chairs would be allowed, but the tents, it was said, might cause damage to the marble on the Smith Street side of the State House.

I spoke briefly to hunger striker Mirjaam Parada, the woman who came up with the idea of the hunger strike. She got the idea from history, and the efforts of people in El Salvador to call attention to the terrible conditions there as the Reagan Administration funded the right wing Contra death squads in the 1980s. A raise in the minimum wage will not benefit Parada directly, she already makes more than $15 an hour as a cook. She is involved because she is committed to the idea of democracy and to the rights of workers.

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Shelby Maldonado

The same is true of the other two women who could begin the hunger strike today. Shelby Maldonado is a Central Falls City Councillor and union organizer. Santa Brito was employed at an area hotel, but was fired shortly after the birth of her son, possibly because of her outspoken labor organizing activities. Neither will directly benefit from a wage in the minimum wage. Instead, they are committed to the right of all workers to a living wage and to the principles of democracy.

Our state legislators could learn a lot from these brave women, if they would only stop and listen.

You can listen to Dr. Nick Tsiongas’ advice to the hunger strikers below.

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Santa Brito

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Hotel activists, CF City Councilor will move forward with hunger strike


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Santa Brito
Santa Brito

Four Providence hotel workers and a Central Falls city councilor say they will go ahead with their planned hunger strike despite even though the state legislature already acted on their issue and Governor Chafee said he intends to sign the municipal minimum wage mandate into law.

“My neighbors should be able to vote on whether or not the hotel owners should give us a raise,” said Santa Brito in a press release. “I am fighting for the future of my son.”

Brito, a leader of the effort, worked at the Renaissance Hotel. She will be joined by Mirjaam Parada, who works at the Omni Hotel, Yilenny Ferreras, who worked at the Providence Hilton and Central Falls City Councilor Shelby Maldonado.

“As an elected official, I want the power to address issues directly, like the minimum wage, for my constituents,” Maldonado said. “I know that workers in my community, many of whom are hotel workers, need a raise. I want the people of Providence to vote and be heard.”

The hunger strike arose from the Providence hotel workers fight for a $15 an hour minimum wage.

The issue began when city hotel workers petitioned the Providence City Council to institute a $15 minimum wage at hotels with more than 25 rooms. On the same night the City Council put the issue on the November ballot, last Thursday, the state House of Representatives passed a budget amendment that prevents cities and towns from implementing a minimum wage higher than the state rate.  The Senate approved the budget bill on Monday and Governor Chafee has since indicated he will sign it into law.

The hunger strike is expected to begin on Thursday.

RI House provided argument against home rule


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GallisonOf great concern last Thursday night for some members of the Rhode Island House of Representatives was the potential of there being something like 39 different minimum wage laws. Again and again, representatives warned of economic disaster if the City of Providence passed a law mandating $15 an hour for hotel workers; and so in response they took away the ability of all cities and towns to pass minimum wage ordinances. It was as naked a revocation of power as has ever been seen in Rhode Island.

Some argued that there shouldn’t be different wages for different jobs. But the budget contained no action to close the tipped wage loophole in Rhode Island. In the minds of those voting for the article, it’s wrong to raise wages for a select few above the state minimum wage, but it’s perfectly fine to pay people less than the state minimum wage.

More to the point, in their repeated invocations of “39 different…” the state’s representatives continually argued against the very existence of the cities and towns that they supposedly represent. Why have “39 different” permitting processes? Why have “39 different” different zoning systems and approval processes? Why have “39 different” school systems (yes, I know in reality there are less)? The possibility of confusing contradictions between jurisdictions never seemed to bother the House of Representatives at any point prior to this moment. As far as I know, not a single candidate ran against the complex maze of towns and cities we have.

Indeed, why even bother having the charade of “39 different” governments, considering how detrimental that could be to business? That’s quite a lot of officials to lobby and donate to. Rhode Island could be far more competitive if they only had to donate to the leadership of, say, 113 people divided into two chambers. Although it might cause damage to Rhode Island’s lobbyist businesses if there was a sudden reduction in the number of government officials to wine and dine.

Now, in practice, there are a number of economically fine counties about the size of Rhode Island in terms of geography and population that have dozens of governments more than Rhode Island. It ultimately goes to show that it’s not the amount of governments that matter, but rather the quality of them. And the quality of Rhode Island’s state government is so low that should anyone seriously suggest moving to a city-state style of government, with the General Assembly in charge of everything, there’d probably be a mass revolt.

That thought should’ve given pause to lawmakers on Thursday night, and a week before that when Rep. Raymond Gallison added the provision to the budget. While the Assembly cries constantly about not wanting to meddle in the affairs of business, meddling in the affairs of its people appears entirely acceptable.

Hotel workers plan week long hunger strike for $15 minimum wage


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Mirjaam Parada, hunger striker

The Rhode Island House, under the leadership of Speaker Nicholas Mattiello, moved to strip away the political power of Providence hotel workers by inserting a provision in the state budget that would prevent municipalities from setting their own minimum wage last Thursday night. This week, the Rhode Island Senate takes up discussion of the budget, and though Senate President M. Teresa Paiva-Weed might wish to continue to ignore the demands of underpaid and overworked hotel workers, it will be hard to do so as five women engage in a hunger strike at the State House in protest.

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Jenna Karlin, Unite Here!

Starting Thursday, five women, including four hotel workers and Central Falls City Councillor Shelby Maldonado, will be camping out 24 hours a day at the State House, refusing any sustenance except water to call attention to the terrible way in which this year’s budget specifically targets low wage workers with the intent of politically silencing their voices. The plan is to strike until Governor Chafee makes his final decision on the budget, which will be a week from Thursday, if past experience is any indicator.

At a press conference Monday afternoon, Unite Here!’s Jenna Karlin talked about how finding volunteers for the hunger strike was not a problem. The problem was settling on only five people to participate, there were so many eager to step up for the cause.

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Evan McLaughlin, hotel worker

Mirjaam Parada is one of the hunger strikers. Parada works at the Omni Hotel and presently makes a comfortable wage in excess of $15, but she is participating in the strike out of solidarity with the workers at the Renaissance and the Hilton, who make far less than she does, and struggle every day to make ends meet.

Hotel worker Evan McLaughlin, who will not be participating in the hunger strike, wants everyone who walks into the State House over the next week to understand that the women not eating outside the the building are doing so because the General Assembly has decided that they do not have the right to petition their city government or fellow voters for fair wages under the new law.

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City Councillor Shelby Maldonado

This change in the law targets the Providence hotel workers, but the effect will be state wide. All 39 town and city councils in the state will lose the ability to determine a key aspect of their economy under the new budget. This is in some ways an end run around democracy itself: The Providence City Council put the measure to give hotel workers $15 an hour on November’s ballot for the voters of Providence to decide. The law championed by Mattiello’s House takes away the power of voters. It seems “big government” is only a problem when it affects a business trying to turn a profit and not when it affects a family trying to eat.

Central Falls Councillor (and union rep) Shelby Maldonado will also be participating in the hunger strike. Maldonado wants to best represent the people who elected her, and she feels she can best do this by championing the democratic process. The rights of the people to determine what is best for their communities is being usurped by a General Assembly that is beholden only to business interests at the expense of low wage workers, and this situation has to stop.

Earlier this year, Senate President M Teresa Paiva-Weed participated in a vigil in the main rotunda of the State House and spoke about this issue of poverty, and her responsibility as a legislator to address this problem.

“The Senate’s focus this session on the economy will be inextricably intertwined with the causes of poverty. We can’t move the economy forward without addressing the very issues that underline poverty.”

She said the vigil and a screening later in the day of [the movie] Inequality For All “will set a tone for the year and the message will be carried with us as we work to meet the significant challenges ahead.”

Even though it seems these words were forgotten by the Senate president moments after leaving her lips, one hopes that Paiva-Weed understands that how we treat our most vulnerable citizens best demonstrates our commitment to our moral responsibilities.

DSC_9621Ironically, just before the hotel workers took to the State House rotunda to talk about their planned hunger strike, there was an event in the Bell Room on the first floor of the State House to celebrate the release of a new cookbook, Extraordinary Recipes from Providence & Rhode Island Chef’s Table by Linda Beaulieu, complete with expertly prepared foods from some of the area’s best chefs. This juxtaposition of fancy food for the entitled political class and a hunger strike by poorly paid workers is a jarring reminder that things are not going right in Rhode Island.

Here’s the press conference video:

Chafee supports statewide minimum wage


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chafee weed foxWhat works for Seattle doesn’t necessarily work for Providence, said a Chafee spokeswoman when asked if the governor supports legislating a statewide minimum wage.

“Because of our uniqueness and size, sound economic policy for Rhode Island calls for a statewide minimum wage rather than a patchwork of wage thresholds,” said Faye Zuckerman, Governor Chafee’s communications director. “The Governor is cognizant of how different geographically we are from many other states such as Washington.”

Although the issue isn’t the same as in Seattle, which recently enacted a $15 city-wide minimum wage, the governor was responding to a municipal minimum wage issue. A group of hotel workers did an end-run around the traditional minimum wage debate by petitioning the Providence City Council to implement a $15 minimum wage for the hotel industry.

After considerable political jockeying, the City Council voted last night to put the issue on the November ballot. But that happened shortly after the state House of Representatives passed a budget item that prohibits cities and towns from setting a minimum wage higher than the state rate.

The state Senate is poised to act on the budget bill Monday. “I can say there is agreement on the budget,” said Senate spokesman Greg Pare.

Zuckerman offered no hints if the governor will sign the budget, saying he “is still reviewing and evaluating the budget. He will examine the budget as a whole and then make a decision.”

PVD City Councillor John Igliozzi: No tax breaks if you pay less than $15


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Providence City Councillor John Igliozzi

During his statements preceding the Providence City Council vote to put the measure granting $15 an hour to hotel workers on November’s ballot, Councillor John Igliozzi suggested an idea that should be given real consideration by all city and town councils in the state.

Igliozzi pointed out that if the Rhode Island General Assembly were to deny cities and towns in Rhode Island the right to set minimum wages within their municipalities, then property tax breaks, called “tax stabilization agreements” in Providence, should only be granted to those businesses that agree to pay their employees at least $15 an hour. Igliozzi pointed out that these agreements are contracts between city governments and the businesses, and that any legally enforceable clause can be included.

The General Assembly cannot interfere in such deals through their usual means of legislative end runs.

It’s a great idea and it should be implemented immediately. No further tax stabilization deals should even be considered in Providence without a legally binding guarantee of a $15 minimum wage for all workers, hired or contracted, at the business seeking the tax break. Further, companies with more than one business in Rhode Island, like The Procaccianti Group, which owns three hotels and pays its workers subpar wages, should be denied future tax breaks on future properties until all its businesses start paying a $15 wage.

PVD City Council puts $15 hotel worker wage on Nov. ballot


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DSC_9551 Castillo
Carmen Castillo

Shortly after the Rhode Island House decided that working men and women should not have the right to petition their city government for fair wages and instead stripped all municipalities in the state of any power to do so, the Providence City Council in an unanimous decision, passed a measure to put the $15 minimum wage for hotel workers on the ballot for voters in the fall.

The efforts of the Providence City Council may be for naught. If the state Senate approves the budget as is, and if Governor Chafee signs the budget into law, then the citizens of Providence will not have the right to set minimum wages in their city, even if 100% of the city’s residents were to demand it.

This is called democracy, Mattiello style.

However, the measure is not dead yet, and some members of the Providence City Council seem intent on sending a signal to the General Assembly indicating that they are not going to sit back and have their ability to govern so cavalierly severed. Councillors Igliozzi and Aponte were especially vocal in pointing out that several businesses in Providence are requesting tax relief, and suggested that such relief should only be given if the businesses agree to pay their workers a living wage.

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Council President Michael Solomon

DSC_9579 Zurier

DSC_9577 Yurdin
Seth Yurdin
DSC_9544 Igliozzi
John Igliozzi
DSC_9543 Aponte
Luis Aponte
DSC_9534 Jennings
Wilbur Jennings
DSC_9525 Jackson
Kevin Jackson

RI House to hotel workers and PVD City Council: screw you


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DSC_9459 Final TallyLast night the Rhode Island House passed a measure in the budget that would eliminate the ability of cities and towns in Rhode Island to set their own minimum wage. Though the bill was targeted to stifle a proposal before the Providence City Council, Representative Ray Gallison, chairman of the House Finance Committee, inserted the new state mandate into the budget bill, which effectively cut off any debate or public comment.

In an effort to combat that proposal, Rep. Maria Cimini, a Providence progressive, introduced an amendment that would allow voters in the city to set the minimum wage by ballot initiatives. But in a curious turn of events withdrew her measure after Rep. Michael Chippendale, a Foster Republican, asked if the language as written would allow cities and towns to lower the minimum wage to $2 an hour.

In response, Cimini asked that Gallison’s bill be taken out of the budget and voted on separately. More debate followed, but the conservative, pro-business members of the General Assembly passed Gallison’s measure 57 to 17. This with no real debate and no public comment. Democracy in action.

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Rep Anthony Giarrusso

Along the way jokes were made, several reps pretended to understand economic policy and an exciting night of politics was had by all.

Somehow though, it was forgotten that the entire reason for Gallison’s bill, the entire reason this was being discussed in the General Assembly at all, was because a small group of hotel workers, men and women working long hours for little pay and less respect, dared to believe that their democratically-elected government might work for them, instead of for the powerful forces of money and business.

DSC_9369 Mattiello
Speaker Mattiello

One can imagine the panic on the faces of the new leadership in the House as they realized that people were rising up and demanding economic policies and laws that benefited the many over the few and the have-nots over the haves. One can further imagine the smug look of satisfaction that passed over their faces as they crafted a plan to take away the tiny amount of political power these working mothers and fathers had access to.

DSC_9384 Gallison
Ray Gallison

After all, how dare someone who has never had the money to donate to a political campaign believe that the system will work for anyone except the rich, the entitled and the well-connected. With a laugh and a smile and barely concealed contempt for everything these working men and women have attempted, Speaker Nicholas Mattiello and the Rhode Island House of Representatives stomped on the rights and the dreams of good people suffering crippling poverty as if it were the most common and expected thing in the world.

Because, sadly, it is.

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Michael Chippendale
DSC_9387 Lima
How many dollars should workers receive?
DSC_9419 MacBeth
Voted against raising working mothers out of poverty.
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Voted for the workers.
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Voted against fair wages.
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Voted for the workers.
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Voted against working mothers.
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Voted for the workers.
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Voted for working mothers.

Lt. Gov. candidate Frank Ferri: ‘I would support $15’ for hotel workers


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Frank Ferri and his husband, Anthony Caparco
Frank Ferri (w/bow tie) and his husband, Anthony Caparco

Candidate for Lt. Governor, Representative Frank Ferri, in conversation with Ian Donnis and Scott McKay on RIPR this morning, became the first candidate for statewide office to publicly declare his support for the workers presently engaged with the Providence City Council to pass a $15 minimum wage for all hotel employees in the city.

First asked sked if the minimum wage should be raised, Ferri said, “I believe the minimum wage should be raised. I’m a small business person, I pay more than the minimum wage. We’re in such income inequity right now that I have no problem with raising it.”

McKay then asked Ferri where the minimum wage should be set, and Donnis asked if he supported the $15 minimum wage proposed by Providence hotel workers. Ferri replied, “I support raising the minimum wage. Where that should be right now? There’s a proposal at the Senate for $9, I’ll support that. I’ve traveled a lot. I’ve seen hotel workers. I know how hard they work and to say that they’re not making $15 an hour… I don’t like that. I think that it should be higher.”

When Donnis asked Ferri to clarify, Ferri said, “I would support $15” for hotel workers in Providence.

This is a game changer. No other candidate for statewide office has made such a bold and progressive declaration in support of these workers. Outside of some members of the Providence City Council, I don’t believe there has been any support from elected officials.

Ferri should find his support of the hotel workers a boost to his campaign. In Providence, an “overwhelming 64% support the $15 minimum wage for hotel workers,” according to a recent poll. In this time of rising economic inequality, measures that bring relief and decent living wages to working families are going to become increasingly popular. Let’s face it, restructuring the estate tax isn’t doing many of us any good, and in truth, merely increases the tax burden on all of us.

The advocacy and work of Frank Ferri was critical in passing marriage equality in Rhode Island last year, and his solid stand on progressive issues has set him apart from his rather dull and predictable opponents, Cumberland Mayor Dan McKee and Secretary of State Ralph Mollis. It should be an interesting primary, as both Mollis and McKee have been in the race for a while and have a fundraising advantage, but Frank Ferri has the support of Rhode Islanders statewide eager to support this progressive champion.

You know what? I’m just going to come right out and say it: Frank Ferri should be our next Lt. Governor. I’m voting for him, you should too. Donate time and money to his campaign. Tell your friends to vote for him. This is our chance to advocate for a real, tried and true progressive for statewide office. Let’s make this happen.

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.)

While workers struggle, hotel owners enjoy $1.4 million tax break


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In an effort to help transform the vacant and decrepit Masonic building into the posh, downtown hotel it is today, the 2003 Providence City Council granted a 19-year property tax “stabilization” to the project developers. Now years later, low-wage employees of the Renaissance Hotel are imploring the current City Council to implement a hotel-industry minimum wage, while Renaissance owners benefit from a $1.4 million tax break this year alone.

Renaissance room cleaner Santa Brito said Providence residents such as herself are picking up the tax slack for the Procaccianti Group, the Cranston-based multinational real estate holdings firm that bought the property in 2012.

“The City increased the tax rate on my house $427.28 this year,” she said. “I cannot understand why [the hotel] is getting a break on its taxes worth millions of dollars, when I have to pay more in my own taxes. There is something very wrong when the richest corporations are getting breaks and regular Providence residents are paying more, and they’re not even giving good jobs to our city in return.”

The Procaccianti Group, , will pay $284,219.18 in property taxes this year, said City Tax Assessor David Quinn. Without the stabilization, he said, it would owe $1,689,548.18 this year.

masonic tax stabilization

Tax stabilization plans, Quinn explained, are utilized to incentivize new development and to smooth tax fluctuations as city properties go through redevelopment.

According to the 2003 act passed by the Council, which you can read here, the Masonic Temple was a state-owned building that provided no tax revenue to the city. It says construction of the building was left unfinished in 1929 and in 2003 was “in a state of great disrepair.”

The act also says the state Economic Development Corporation (now dba as the Commerce Corporation) predicted the hotel would employ “140 people with an estimated payroll of $4 million, plus healthcare benefits.” Earlier this year, hotel workers and labor activists petitioned the Council to terminate the tax break based on the Procaccianti Group’s failure to provide living-wage jobs. The Council did not act on the matter.

Quinn said the Procaccianti Group will likely seek a second tax stabilization for an extended stay hotel it plans to build across the street from the Convention Center. Procaccianti also owns the downtown Hilton Hotel, and Quinn said the company is currently contesting its tax bill on that property.

“Hopefully they will compromise towards me,” Quinn said. “I’ve already compromised toward them. I have a simple philosophy: if people pay their fair share most people pay less.”

Cranston-based Procaccianti Group owns 3 hotels in Providence, 8 in Rhode Island and a total of 59 in 22 states, according to its website. Its local hotel employees have been fighting for better wages and working conditions for years. Recently they petitioned the City Council to approve a hotel-industry specific minimum wage of $15 an hour.

A Council subcommittee canceled a meeting to consider the proposal last week and has yet to reschedule it. If the Council doesn’t act on the matter, activists could get the issue on the November ballot by collecting 5,000 signatures. The issue has political implications for Mayor Angel Taveras, who is running for governor. He’ll need activist support to overcome Raimondo’s fundraising advantage, and if he wants activist support he’ll need to show progressive leadership.

When asked for comment, his staff said the Taveras wants to study the issue and would not like to comment on it further.

Fired Hilton Hotel workers ask City Council, Taveras for support


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DSC_9470Regular readers of RI Future will remember Adrienne Jones, profiled here after she was fired from the Providence Hilton Hotel, ending six years of employment, during her unionization activities. She joined the dozens of other working mothers who were abandoned by the City Council last Thursday night when the Ordinance Committee meeting, that was to discuss and vote on a proposed $15 minimum wage for hotel workers, was cancelled at the eleventh hour for reasons unknown.

DSC_8399Besides Adrienne Jones we have Ylleni Ferrares, another working mother with young children fired from the Hilton Hotel. Ferrares claims that when women speak out about the working conditions at the hotel, the are fired. One would think that a company receiving $4000 a day in tax breaks from the City of providence could repay that generosity by treating its workers well and paying them fairly.

The first video is translated into English, the second is in Spanish.

Providence to Seattle: a roundup of municipal minimum wage proposals


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minimum wageAs the Providence City Council considers implementing a $15 minimum wage ordinance for local hotel workers, it’s important to remember the Capital City would be by no means the first municipality to legislate a low-wage threshold.

Seattle made national news Monday for passing a $15 city-wide minimum wage, giving the left-leaning Northwestern metropolis the highest minimum wage law in the country. “Seattle wants to stop the race to the bottom in wages,” Councilman Tom Rasmussen said.

“This progressive and expensive city struck a blow against rising income inequality Monday when the City Council voted unanimously to raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour, the highest municipal minimum of any metropolis in the country and the rallying cry of fast-food workers and union organizers nationwide,” wrote Maria L. La Ganga of the Los Angeles Times.

And across the country, many other municipalities are considering city-wide minimum wage laws.

Chicago lawmakers put a $15 minimum wage ordinance up for discussion last week, Reuters reports. The San Diego City Council is considering putting a $13.09 minimum wage ordinance to voters. But New York City could also be the next big city to implement a local solution to low wages. Mayor Bill de Blasio this weekend helped Gov Andrew Cuomo agree in spirit to allowing NYC to implement a $13 minimum wage. Earlier this year, Portland, Maine considered a municipal minimum wage too.

There are only a handful of cities around the country with all-encompassing municipal minimum wage ordinances, and they seem to come in clumps. SeaTac, Washington, the city that grew up around the Seattle-Tacoma airport, implemented by voter referendum a $15 minimum wage last year. Sante Fe, New Mexico passed the first city-wide minimum wage law in 2004, and was then joined by Albuquerque and several New Mexico counties. San Francisco also passed a minimum wage bill in 2004, and neighboring Oakland, San Jose and Richmond now have similar laws. There is a minimum wage law in Milwaukee, Wisconsin (and similar efforts afoot in Eau Claire and Lacrosse). New Orleans and Washington DC each have minimum wage laws.

According to 2011 data from the National Employment Law Center, there are more than 100 cities around the United States with living wage ordinances, many which apply specifically to businesses and industries that receive public assistance The Renaissance Hotel, from where the Providence effort emanated, received a $1.4 million property tax break from the city this year.

Los Angeles is considering a hotel-industry specific $15.85 minimum wage bill, much like the one in Providence. The proposal there exempts hotels will fewer than 100 rooms, and the Providence version exempts hotels with fewer than 25 rooms. In LA, hotel employees in the LAX neighborhood have had a minimum wage law protection since 2007.

Hasira S. Ashemu, the senior communications specialist for Los Angeles Alliance for a New Economy … pointed out the increase is already present in certain areas of the city. Hotel workers in the immediate vicinity of Los Angeles International Airport are a paid a minimum of $15.37. The wage was established in 2007 after the city adopted a “living wage” ordinance, raising the rates of hotel workers and LAX employees.

Here in Providence, Mayor Angel Taveras, who is running for governor, told WPRI he would like to study the idea.

There’s been some research done already, as Seattle debated a minimum wage. According to the Seattle Times today:

What have the effects been on employment?

Almost none, according to economists at the University of California, Berkeley, who have studied San Francisco, eight other cities that raised their minimum wages in the past decade, and 21 states with higher base pay than the federal minimum.

Businesses absorbed the costs through lower turnover, small price increases at restaurants, which have a high concentration of low-wage workers, and higher worker productivity, the researchers found.

Hotel worker Auro Rodriguez: ‘Mayor Taveras, we are just like your mother’


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DSC_8319Renaissance Hotel room cleaner Auro Rodriguez says she once sat down across from Mayor Taveras and that he told her the story of his hard-working mother, who put him through school and college with her hard work in low paying jobs. He promised, says Rodriguez, that he would not forget these workers…

So the question, I suppose, is where was Mayor Angel Taveras on Thursday night, when dozens of working women showed up to a City Council Ordinance Committee meeting that was to discuss the $15 an hour hotel worker minimum wage ordinance?

Why is Auro Rodriguez talking to my camera outside the locked door of the Mayor’s office, instead of to the Mayor or to the City Council?

The first video is translated into English, the second is in the original Spanish.

Watch video of Santa Brito speaking to Mayor Taveras and the Providence City Council, via video here.

Elorza, Smiley speak out on cancelled City Hall meeting


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Abandoned at City Hall

Thursday night’s last minute cancellation of the Providence City Council’s Ordinance Committee remains unexplained. Both the mayor’s office and members of the city council remain silent about the cancellation that left more than a hundred hotel workers and supporters, mostly women and working mothers, to arrive at an empty and unresponsive City Hall.

Two Democratic primary mayoral candidates did respond to my request for a comment on the cancellation, however. While not going so far as to support the $15 an hour minimum wage ordinance the hotel workers have brought before the City Council, the two candidates did champion the idea of open government and were critical of the decision to cancel the meeting without taking into account the sacrifices made by the workers to attend.

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Jorge Elorza

“This cancellation was an unnecessary and avoidable problem for those who planned on attending,” said Elorza, “As I made clear in my proposal on Revitalizing and Revamping City Hall, I believe that creating a friendly, customer service oriented atmosphere in City Hall is vital to maintaining the healthy functions of our government.”

Brett Smiley
Brett Smiley

Josh Block, Communications Director for the Smiley campaign, relayed the following statement to the hotel workers, “Brett shares your frustrations. He believes that, whatever decision is reached, it must be done in an open and transparent process. Brett is disappointed in the City Council leadership for playing politics and canceling the vote at the 11th hour without notifying the many hardworking men and women who made significant sacrifices and arrangements in order to show up and make sure their voices were heard.”

It is the right of every American that government be open and accessible. One might hope that the hotel workers be someday given an explanation and apology.


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