California
governor set to sign $15-an-hour minimum wage law
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[April 04, 2016]
By Dan Whitcomb
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - California
Governor Jerry Brown on Monday was expected to sign into a law a plan to
raise the minimum wage from $10 to $15 an hour by the year 2023, making
the nation's most-populous state the first to boost pay to that level
for the working poor.
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The bill marks the culmination of a deal Brown brokered with labor
leaders and state Democratic leaders and puts California, home to
one of the world's biggest economies, at the forefront of U.S.
states and cities that have moved to surpass the federal minimum
wage, which has remained at $7.25 an hour since 2009.
Both houses of California's state legislature approved the measure
on Thursday, fast-tracking the measure two days after the deal was
announced by Brown, a popular Democrat.
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, also a Democrat, that same day
announced a proposal to gradually raise the minimum wage to $15 an
hour in parts of that state.
Raising the minimum wage has cropped up on many Democratic
candidates' agendas ahead of the November elections in the hopes it
could help mobilize voters to the polls. Democratic presidential
hopeful U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders has called for raising the
federal minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2020.
The California measure heads off two competing ballot initiatives
that lacked a provision to allow the governor to suspend increases
in hard economic times, a deal-breaker for Brown.
With polls showing strong support for those measures at the ballot
box, Brown emphasized that a version passed by the legislature would
allow lawmakers to amend it if needed over time instead of going
back to voters to request amendments in expensive and uncertain
campaigns.
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Moderate Democrats and most Republicans complained that it was being
rushed through, and would disproportionately harm businesses in
poorer parts of the state, where the cost of living is not high
enough to warrant such a dramatic wage hike.
Fourteen states and several cities began 2016 with minimum wage
increases, typically phasing in raises that will ultimately take
them to between $10 and $15 an hour.
(Editing by Sara Catania and Mary Milliken)
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