General Assembly Approves Minimum Wage Increase


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The House passed a bill today that would raise the minimum wage in Rhode Island by $.35 to $7.75 an hour. Because the proposal was already approved by the Senate, the bill now goes to the Gov. Chafee’s desk before it can take effect. If the governor signs it into law, it would be the first increase to the minimum wage in five years.

Rep. David Bennett, a populist Democrat from Warwick who sponsored the bill, was quick to point out that it isn’t necessarily progressive legislation just because it will help low-wage workers.

“This minimum wage hike, which is a five percent increase over the current $7.40, still represents a significant lag over the increase in inflation during the past five years,” he said in a statement. “But an increase is absolutely necessary to help the people at the bottom of the pay scale, who are doing vital jobs for our economy and are struggling to make ends meet.”

While legislators deserve credit for passing the increase, Rhode Island’s minimum wage would still be the third lowest in New England. Currently, only New Hampshire has a lower minimum wage at $7.25 and the proposed increase would vault RI ahead of Maine, which has a minimum wage of $7.50. Vermont has the highest minimum wage in New England at $8.46. Massachusetts in $8 an hour and Connecticut is $8.25. Nationally, Rhode Island would be about in the middle of the pack.

All House Republicans voted against the bill.

Ontario Poses Conflict for Conservative Ideology


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OK, I recently spent some time in Ontario.

Which, is part of Canada, but it’s only a part. I cannot speak about Canada as a whole, but I can speak about Ontario.

Ontario has a much higher tax burden than any state (including RI and NJ) in the USofA.  Gas costs more than $5 per gallon. It has universal health care. The minimum wage is $10.25 per hour.  Union density remains very high. Factory jobs pay well. The regulatory environment makes California look like a Libertarian paradise.

IOW, it’s a socialist heck-hole.

If one listens to RW ‘economists’, these conditions mean that the economy of Ontario has to–HAS TO!!–be in the tank, right? According to every RW pundit and crank and know-nothing, all of those conditions mean that the economy has to–HAS TO!!–be creeping along at a negative growth rate. It’s a law of nature. Taxes, regulation, unions, high minimum wage, any one of these are job killers. The whole group of them must be–MUST BE!!–Economy Killers.

Right? Right! Ayn Rand said so!

Guess what? The economy of Ontario is booming. There was no financial crisis. Why not? The regulatory environment didn’t allow the banking system (or shadow banking system, which pretty much doesn’t exist north of the border) to play Russian Roulette the way banks here did.

The high minimum wage means that even people working low-end service jobs have money to spend. And they spend it. Which stimulates the economy. Just like Henry Ford said would happen.

The universal health care means less time is lost to sickness, and that sick people get care before they end up in the emergency room, and cost 5-6 times what it should cost to treat them. Costs which uninsured people pass on to the rest of us. So their health care system produces comparable results at about half the cost.

(Ah, I can hear it: but but but you have to wait six months for a hip replacement!! Yeah. What’s the point? Hip replacements are elective. Yes, they make people’s lives better, but they aren’t generally a matter of life and death. And, who gets most hip replacements in the US? Folks with single-payer health insurance. Except here we call it “Medicare”.)

My point is that, according to Ayn Rand, and Paul Ryan, Charles Krauthammer and the WSJ (and too many others to name), the economy of Ontari0 has to–HAS TO!!– be dismal. In fact, it’s great.

How is that possible? Could it be (gasp!) that RW ‘economics’ is actually an ideological position, completely divorced from the way the real world actually works?

That’s exactly what it means. The stuff that RW ‘economists’ claim is actually an ideological belief that has nothing to do with how the economy in the real world actually works.

Don’t believe me? Go to Ontario. Look at the cranes in Toronto, the spanking-new factories along the highway, the huge numbers of houses being built in London, the industry in Sarnia.

Bill would raise minimum wage in Rhode Island


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You’ll often hear the mantra that Rhode Island has one of the highest tax rates in New England. Well, on the other side of economic spectrum, we also have the second lowest minimum wage in New England.

But Rep. David Bennett, D-Warwick, sponsored a bill that would raise Rhode Island’s minimum wage from $7.40 to $7.75. It will be heard by the House Labor Committee tonight after the regular session.

“You try living on that,” Bennett said. “You can’t do it.”

While the increase would only mean another $14 a week for employees making the minimum wage, annually that is enough to make a mortgage or rent payment. Or at least pay some utility bills.

Still, the increase would only put Rhode Island at the second lowest rate in New England. Currently, only New Hampshire has a lower minimum wage at $7.25 and the proposed increase would vault RI ahead of Maine, which has a minimum wage of $7.50. Vermont has the highest minimum wage in New England at $8.46.

“If someone can make an extra dollar an hour by taking a similar job in Vermont,” Bennett said, “they might just do that.”

Nationally, Rhode Island falls right in the middle of the pack with the 26th lowest minimum wage in the country. Most of the state that have a lower minimum wage are in the midwest, where the cost of living is much lower than on the coasts. New Jersey and Maryland both have a minimum wage of $7.25, which is the lowest it can be according to federal law.

If the bill becomes law, Rhode Island’s minimum wage would increase annually starting in 2014 in conjunction with the Northeast Consumer Price Index.


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