Estimated reading time: 0 minutes, 57 seconds

Los Angeles Joins Cities Raising Minimum Wage

Reflecting a growing trend in both the public and private sectors, the city of Los Angeles recently announced it will raise its minimum wage to $15 per hour over the next five years – the largest municipality in the nation to enact a similar hike. So reports the Huffington Post.

The current minimum of $9 an hour was already scheduled to jump to $10 starting next January. San Francisco and Seattle both voted for hourly wage hikes for city employees to $15 last year. More recently, giant retailers Wal-Mart and Target agreed to increase their minimums to at least $9/hour on the heels of other large stores taking similar action.

The Los Angeles increase will affect more than 560,000 city workers; about 10,000 hotel workers were granted raises to $15.37 per hour by the city last year. While the movement to raise wages for hourly workers is gaining traction in some corners, the federal minimum wage has remained at $7.25/hour for the past four years. The Obama administration has long advocated for a national increase to $10.10/hour, but it’s unlikely to become law before the President’s term expires.

Read the full article from the Huffington Post.

Read 3121 times
Rate this item
(0 votes)

Visit other PMG Sites: