No love for pay hike of one buck
Andrew Edwards
Newport-Mesa’s representatives in the state Assembly plan to vote
against a bill that would raise the state’s minimum wage by one
dollar by July 2007.
The bill, proposed by San Jose Democrat Sally Lieber, also would
mandate automatic annual minimum wage increases starting in 2008.
Future wage hikes would be pegged to inflation.
Assembly members could vote on the bill as early as today. If both
houses of the Legislature pass Lieber’s bill, the measure would still
have to get past Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, who vetoed Lieber’s
previous effort to up the minimum wage in September.
A release from Lieber’s office stated the bill was designed to
increase minimum wage earners’ purchasing power. The state’s minimum
wage is currently set at $6.75.
California’s minimum wage is the lowest on the West Coast, but
higher than the federal minimum wage of $5.15 per hour, according to
the Department of Labor.
Republican Assembly members Van Tran, who represents Costa Mesa,
and Chuck DeVore, whose district includes Newport Beach, both view
the bill as unneeded government meddling in the labor market. Newport
Beach Chamber of Commerce president Richard Luehrs and UC Irvine
economist Richard McKenzie also oppose the bill.
“It’s just an anti-business, anti-free market legislation,” Tran
said. Tran believes a higher minimum wage would induce business
owners to raise prices and possibly send jobs to other countries.
Legislators’ efforts to help minimum wage earners by raising their
pay typically backfire, McKenzie argued. He said a 10% wage increase
could decrease teenage employment by about 3%. Upping the minimum
wage, McKenzie added, could also lead employers to erode any benefits
minimum wage earners receive and increase job demands.
“It’s just a bad deal all around,” he said.
The Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce opposed Lieber’s 2004
attempt to raise the minimum wage. Luehrs asserted small business
owners cannot afford to pay higher wages in addition to the costs of
employees’ health insurance, energy costs, workers’ compensation and
lawsuits.
Restaurants, which often pay employees minimum wage plus tips,
would likely become more expensive if the bill passes, Luehrs said.
John Wang, owner of the Golden Dragon restaurant in Costa Mesa,
agreed dinners could have higher price tags if the law requires him
to pay his employees more.
“You’ve got to raise prices; you’ve got to adjust things,” Wang
said.
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