Show you support $15!

Seattle is standing up for a $15 minimum wage and now you can show your support right from home! Click right here, fill out your address and we will mail you a snazzy "$15 for Seattle" window sign.

15 for Seattle Word Cloud WebgraphicNeed a reminder why we are fighting for $15 in Seattle? Check out a few of the workers' stories below.


Kyle, McDonald's "I'm a father of a 6 month old baby. I'm trying to help care for my girlfriend and our daughter, but I can’t do that on minimum wage. I don't have a car so I ride the bus back and forth everyday, taking a bus on a two hour ride to visit them in Tumwater where they are. We are trying to find a place on our own right now but it's hard on what they pay us. My life would be dramatically changed if I could afford a car, a place of our own and $15 would help get me there. 

Crystal, Domino's "I've been working at Domino's for five years and still make minimum wage. A raise to $15 an hour would help me and my son raise ourselves out of poverty. I’m a single mother. I live in a bad neighborhood and I’m trying to get out. I want to get out but it’s a struggle — it’s hard to get out on this minimum wage. I want to go back to school but right now I'm living check to check. I get food stamps and child care subsidies but it's a constant day to day struggle. I don’t know how many hours I am going to get each week, sometimes up, sometimes down. I love my job, I like to work, I just wish it would pay a little more."

Luis, McDonald's "I work at the McDonald’s on Madison and it’s not possible to survive on minimum wage. I’m supporting three granddaughters because their father died. I’m taking care of them, but it is not easy to maintain a decent lifestyle for them. It’s really hard to live on minimum wage. If I was making $15 an hour they would be able to pursue a better career and wouldn’t have to only worry about their current living situation."

"I want to get out."

Seattle fast food workers have called for a one day, city-wide boycott of McDonald’s, Burger King and Wendy’s on February 20th. Here’s why.

“I have two kids and a wife and I send money back home as well. What we are making now we can’t take care of ourselves. It’s tough and it gets tougher when they cut your hours. With little hours and making minimum wage I can’t take care of myself, much less take care of my family.” - Jose

I live in a household with seven other people in a two bedroom, one bath house. I live in a room now with three people. I just think that if the minimum wage was raised I would be able to afford day to day stuff, maybe even move out on my own, and just live my life.” - Martina

“Both my parents have disabilities. I’m the only one bringing in income for the family. I am always taking extra shifts, but these companies that pay this low minimum wage just don’t understand how hard it is to make it. $15 an hour would change our lives.” - Alonna

“I’ve worked in fast food for five years. I’m a single mother. I live in a bad neighborhood and I’m trying to get out. I want to get out. It’s a struggle. It’s hard on this minimum wage. I’m living check to check. I want to get out.” - Crystal

Join us: Pack your lunch, spread the word, and show support for $15 for Seattle by pledging to Boycott McPoverty on February 20th.

Don't you buy that Footlong!

“I heard about this Subway thing from my local paper in Bremerton,” said Cory, who had come to Seattle for the picket line near Pike Place Market. “I had to come out here. My granddaughter works at Subway and I’d hate for her to have to put up with this mistreatment. Subway needs to respect its workers and give Carlos his job back.” gallerycarlos2

Subway fired a striking worker, Carlos, a week after he helped lead a city wide fast food worker strike.  In response, the community has created an online petition, given one star reviews on Yelp and taken our message to the streets — six different Subway stores in less than a week.

From the Broadway Subway up on Capitol Hill, the Subway across from the Olive 8 hotel, the Subway at Pike Place Market, to the local headquarters of this chain of Subways at the corner of Denny and Fairview, the pickets have brought the lunch rush at the sandwich maker to a screeching halt.

Customers saw our picket, read the information and turned away – siding with the workers instead of the corporate footlong maker.

A worker wearing a traffic caution vest refused to cross the picket line. “I ain’t eating no scab sandwiches!”

A trio entered the Subway after grabbing a leaflet, read it and then all walked out of the store shaking their heads and giving thumbs up to the crowd.

A man wearing a Sounders knit cap with the Subway logo emblazoned on it, took a flier explaining the situation, stopped and talked with us, pulled out a camera and then refused to eat at Subway.

A crew of construction workers walking up from a job a few blocks away saw the picket line, read the information and turned away, seeking lunch elsewhere.

The community support has been overwhelming and the local media has taken notice as well.

TV cameras from KIRO, KOMO and KING 5 showed up at the various pickets talking to the workers and community members who came out in support of Carlos and his fellow workers.  News articles flew off the pages in The Stranger, The Puget Sound Business Journal, KPLU, The Stand, Salon and The Capitol Hill Blog.

“I’m just so grateful for all this support,” said Carlos into a TV camera. “I’m out here because Subway thinks they can keep me quiet and keep its workers down. They can’t. They won’t. We are going to keep fighting for better pay and the right to organize without retaliation. I’ll keep talking to my co-workers, the bosses and anyone who will listen.”

Raise. The. Wage.

Corporate profits are booming —so why are so many jobs paying poverty wages? And get this, some politicians have actually proposed to CUT minimum wage. Seriously. Sign here to tell politicians we need to raise the wage. Jobs should create opportunity, not poverty.

handmoneyangled1When our jobs don’t pay enough to support basic spending levels, it stalls our economy, causing others to lose hours, wages and shifts. When workers are struggling just to make ends meet, it hurts our families, and our communities suffer. We need to raise the wage to boost the economy — study after study proves just that.

The Economic Policy Institute, an economic think tank, has just released a new report which found that when you raise the minimum wage it immediately gives an economic jump-start to the folks who need it most. When all of us are paid decent wages we can make a better go at it. We can put food on the table, pay bills, shop for new toys, go out to eat — putting money right back into our community.

It’s a virtuous cycle. All of us need a boost. It’s time to tell the politicians that corporations need to pay living wage.

Alaska Airlines announces record 2012 profits – but Sea-Tac workers are stuck in poverty-wage jobs

*For Immediate Release, January 24, 2013 Contact: Thea Levkovitz, thea@workingwa.org

Today (Thursday, Jan. 24) Alaska Airlines reported profits of $316 million in 2012. This represents a 3rd consecutive year of record profits for the SeaTac-based company.

But meanwhile, poverty wages continue for the Sea-Tac baggage handlers, fuelers, passenger service workers, and cabin cleaners who work for the contractors that help make Alaska Airlines successful. Their reaction to today’s news of Alaska’s record profits:

Saba Belachew serves Alaska Airlines customers as a wheelchair attendant for BAGS, Inc.:

"It’s appalling that my co-workers and I are paid minimum wage while Alaska Airlines makes record profits. We’re part of Alaska’s success. We provide quality customer services, every day of the year. Who can raise a family on $9.19 an hour? It’s time for Alaska’s executives and shareholders to respect all the workers who have made their company so profitable. It’s time for them to share in the success.”

Muse Abdallah serves Alaska Airlines customers as a baggage handler for Menzies:

“I am responsible for getting passenger bags out in 20 minutes to help Alaska Airlines make their record profits. I'm proud to provide quality service to Alaska's customers but my co-workers and I are paid poverty wages. While Alaska's executives are making more money, at the same time I will make less because my holiday pay has just been cut.”

Community leaders also weighed in on the news of Alaska’s record profits.

Jackie O’Ryan, Co-Director, Faith Action Network:

“With the gulf continuing to grow between the rich and the working poor, companies face the moral challenge of sharing success. We’re waiting for the leaders of Alaska Airlines to say they will share the success with all the workers who helped them win it. It’s unfathomable that many of Alaska’s contract workers still earn poverty wages while company leaders celebrate such monetary gains.”

The baggage handlers, fuelers, passenger service workers, and cabin cleaners are employed by contractors that are hired by Alaska Airlines. They are among the 2,800 airline- contracted workers at our airport who are paid poverty wages by area standards. These workers and their community allies are beginning to speak out and to call on Alaska and other airlines at Sea-Tac to make every airport job a good job.

Additionally, these workers also are speaking out about unsafe and illegal working conditions at contractors of Alaska Airlines and other airlines. Last month, more than 50 workers filed complaints with the Washington State Department of Labor and Industries, alleging widespread violations of workplace health and safety, and also wage theft. L&I is investigating the allegations against the contractors, and also has expanded the investigation to include Alaska Airlines itself.

For additional information: www.itsOURairport.org

Download the report: First-class Airport, Poverty-class Jobs

Read the op-ed from SeaTac Deputy Mayor Mia Gregerson: Alaska Airlines should hire contactors that pay a living wage

Read the Faith Leaders’ open letter to Alaska CEO: Faith leaders’ letter to Alaska CEO Brad Tilden

Working Washington, a Washington based non-profit coalition of individuals, neighborhood associations, immigrant groups, civil rights organizations, people of faith, and labor united for good jobs and a fair economy.