Tuesday, May 13th, Show the Seattle City Council You Support $15!

The Seattle City Council is having one of their last public hearings before they vote on whether to accept the mayor's proposal to get everyone to $15 an hour. The meeting is open to the public, starts at 6pm, and will be one of the last opportunities we have to tell the city council we support $15 for Seattle. We need to fill the room.

Last year, fast food, grocery and other workers from across the city paved the way in demanding a living wage for Seattle workers. We are now on the verge of achieving a $15 minimum wage that ensures every worker in Seattle can support themselves, afford the basics, and contribute to the economy.

Let's show the wide array of support for a strong $15 for Seattle this Tuesday, May 13th, at Rainier Beach High School.

Seattle City Council Committee on Minimum Wage and Income Inequality

May 13, 2014 6 PM

Rainier Beach High School

8815 Seward Park Ave South

Seattle, WA 98188

Mayor's $15 minimum wage plan earns support of low wage workers

Working Washington expresses support for Mayor Murray's $15 minimum wage plan

“This is a $15 minimum wage plan that works for workers, and for the entire city"

On behalf of the fast-food workers whose strikes, marches, boycotts, and other mobilizations brought the call for $15 an hour to the center of public debate, Working Washington issues the following statement in support of the Mayor's plan to achieve a true $15 minimum wage for all workers:

This is a $15 minimum wage plan that works for workers, and for the entire city.

Representatives of working people, businesses, nonprofits, and other diverse community leaders have come together on a recommendation that reaches a true $15 minimum wage for all workers, helps independent businesses & nonprofits thrive, and includes robust community-based enforcement.

It's an incredible accomplishment.

On May 30th of last year, Seattle fast food workers went on strike for $15 because they knew that raising pay was necessary — even if in those first days it might not have seemed possible we could get there. But their leadership and commitment helped spark an extraordinary grassroots workers' movement that rapidly built support across the entire city. Less than a year later, we are on the verge of achieving a $15 minimum wage that ensures every worker in Seattle can support themselves, afford the basics, and contribute to the economy.

Fast food workers led the way forward, and the city has heard their call. 

"What matters most to me is my 4 year old daughter, Canaela," said Julia DePape, a Seattle McDonald's worker with Working Washington. "My dream is to give her the same opportunities as other children. For starters, I want to provide a stable home for her and I want to give her a space to call her own. Also, Canaela loves cats and dogs and probably any other animal she'd meet. I dream of taking her to the zoo for the first time because I can only imagine how her face would light up. With $15, I have a chance at that!"

Now that Mayor Murray has achieved broad agreement on a plan that makes a true $15 minimum wage a reality for all Seattle workers, we look forward to working with City Council to move forward and put these recommendations into law.

Highlights:

The Mayor's plan raises up 100,000 low-wage workers, lifting our entire city:

  • Everyone who works at a big business like McDonald's or Lowe's and doesn’t receive healthcare through their job will see their minimum wage rise to $15/hour by January 1, 2017. The $15/hour minimum will increase with inflation every year after that; this rate sets the standard for all workers.
  • Every low-wage worker in the city will see a significant increase to their base wage each year as they get to $15/hour, and then to parity with the citywide minimum
  • Every worker gets to the same place: a true inflation-adjusted $15 minimum wage — with no deductions for tips or benefits. At current rates of inflation, the citywide minimum for all workers will reach about $18.13/hour in ten years.
  • Every worker will benefit from a robust system of community-based enforcement that ensures the $15 minimum wage, sick leave, wage theft, and other labor standards are realities for every worker in Seattle.

City Hall surrounded by $15 for Seattle

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We are closer than ever to bringing a $15 minimum wage that will lift up all of Seattle by ensuring low wage workers can meet their basic needs and contribute to the economy. Closer, but not there yet. So we and a few hundred of our friends surrounded City Hall to show the breadth and depth of support across Seattle for $15.

We spread out holding over 1200 feet of banners with all the reasons we need $15 and all the people who will benefit.  We surrounded City Hall — the entire city block.

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Support our families. Afford to survive. Live on our own. Pay the bills. We completely surrounded City Hall in downtown Seattle.

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What we need is a $15 minimum wage so everyone can support themselves, afford the basics, and contribute to the economy.

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This is who $15 for Seattle will benefit: women, neighbors, immigrants, youth, renters, people of color, leaders, customers, workers, EVERYONE.

$15 for Seattle - April 23, 2014

Support our families. Afford to survive. Live on our own. Pay the bills. That’s what workers need: a $15 minimum wage so everyone can support themselves, afford the basics, and contribute to the economy.

Join us April 23rd at City Hall to show how strongly our community supports $15 for Seattle.

We’ll gather on the 4th Avenue side of City Hall at 4 pm. First we’ll form a giant “15” on the City Hall plaza, and then spread out to surround the entire block with signs that show all the reasons we need $15 for Seattle — how broad the support for $15 is.

Wednesday, April 23, 2014 Seattle City Hall 600 4th Avenue Gather at 4:00 pm

"$15 for Seattle" supporters to surround City Hall on Wednesday

Supporters of $15 for Seattle to rally at City Hall Wednesday, then surround the entire block with chain of multicolored signs

As Mayor Murray's Income Inequality Advisory Committee nears its deadline, supporters of a $15 minimum wage for Seattle will rally at City Hall, thensurround the entire block from 4th to 5th and James to Cherry with a chain of multicolored signs that show why we need a $15 minimum wage — and how broad the benefits will be to our city and our economy.

Who: Workers, women, youth, people of color, immigrants, customers, renters, neighbors, and leaders who support $15 for Seattle so everyone can afford to survive, pay the bills, live on our own, and support our families.

What/visuals: After a brief program, we will form a human "15", then disperse to surround the entire block of City Hall with a chain of multicolored signs that show who we are and why we need $15 for Seattle.

WhenWednesday, April 23, 2014. We will begin gathering at 4:00 pm. Brief program scheduled to begin at 4:30 pm before we form a human 15 at approximately 5:00 pm, and then surround the entire block of City Hall from 4th Ave to 5th Ave and James St to Cherry St.

Where: Seattle City Hall, 600 4th Ave. We will gather in the plaza on the 4th Ave side.

15 for Seattle ###

Contact: Sage Wilson, Working Washington, sage@workingwa.org

Extra Car Park isn't paying their workers $15/hr

Two groups of airport workers and community supporters took it right to their employers, Extra Car Park and Air Serv, demanding better wages and working conditions.

Extra Car Park isn’t paying their workers the $15/hour that the people of SeaTac voted for and is trying to intimidate workers who are standing up for what they deserve. When Extra Car workers filed complaints with the City of SeaTac, their boss started firing them. We all aren’t going to put up with that.

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Extra Car workers, other airport workers, Teamsters, SEIU members and other allies marched in front of Extra Car’s parking lot waving signs, yelling and calling management out for their shady treatment of their workers.

“Shame! Shame! You’ve gone too far, Extra Car!”

Extra Car management tried to push us, literally, off of the public sidewalk and tried to encourage cars to drive right through us as we marched. We still didn’t back down.

Later in the day, workers announced they’ve filed a class-action lawsuit against Extra Car. Through street heat, organizing and legal action, we’ll win justice at Extra Car!

Right down the street we walked into the Air Serv main offices and delivered a petition, signed by the majority of Air Serv workers, calling on management to meet with the workers’ committee.

Air Serv workers handle baggage, clean airplanes, and provide wheelchair services at Sea-Tac Airport. The company is profitable but treats its workers shabbily.

“You don’t pay us the $15 we deserve,” said Alex Hoopes, an Air Serv worker. “You just keep cutting hours, and cutting hours. You keep hiring new people when the rest of us can’t make enough.”

We cheered as management started mumbling a weak retort.

“How are we supposed to be loyal to you when you aren’t loyal to us?”

We crammed into the Air Serv office, filling it and spilling into the hallway. What we wanted was simple. Management needs to meet with the workers’ committee to start to address the continuing issues of low pay, a lack of respect, and safety issues.

One person shouted out, “Just meet with us!” Another said, “You don’t give us any dignity. We want to be paid enough to actually live!”

As we asked for the management to do the right thing by its workers, one person summed everything up.

“We just want management to agree to meet with us and go over these issues that won’t go away.  We just want respect. And we won’t stop until we get it.”

From child labor to $15/hour, new report reveals 100 years of Chicken Little predictions by business

The 9-hour day will hurt department stores, a 25¢ minimum wage will destroy all jobs in the south, and sick leave will cost Seattle $90 million

The Sky Remains Aloft: a century of mistaken predictions from child labor and "immoral women" to sick leave and SeaTac 

MasterPark, hiring for $15 in SeaTacAs Seattle continues to debate the $15 minimum wage, many of the far-fetched predictions, projections, and threats made by some business lobbyists sound eerily familiar.

Our new report — "The Sky Remains Aloft" — compiles a century of mistaken projections about the impact on business of improving workers living standards.

In the century since Washington State first passed a minimum wage, the real-world data has become increasingly clear: raising wages lifts workers out of poverty, creates new customers, boosts the economy, has very moderate price impacts, and does not reduce job growth. But despite the long-standing experiential evidence dating all the way back to 1915, some business lobbyists continue to tell the same scare stories the’ve been telling for the last century — even though the sky has yet to fall.

"The Sky Remains Aloft," is available online for immediate release.

Highlights include:

1903: A 9-hour day for children will hurt department stores?

The child labor measure is being vigorously attacked by the department stores to the State. Representatives of these stores are using all of their influence…to secure the defeat of this bill, on account of a provision which it contains limited the work of children from fourteen to sixteen years of age to nine hours a day. — Department store owners, opposing child labor protections. Child Labor Bill Signed. One More Remains to be Passed — Department Stores Said to be Fighting It, NY Times, April 16, 1903

1949: Any minimum wage causes “immediate unemployment”?

Any temporary advantage to our 2 million employees would be more than offset by immediate unemployment within our industry. [A] national minimum wage within our industry is impractical and dangerous. —George R. LeSauvage, National Restaurant Association, 1949

1991: Any wage above $4.25 will drive Hardee’s out of business?

I don’t know what kind of dream world they’re in. When [the cost of] your labor component goes up, it ultimately gets passed on to the consumer.  [If another wage increase were enacted], we’d probably be out of business at some point. —John Merritt, Senior Vice President, Hardee’s

2004: Raising the wage above $5.15 is a “job killer” at Domino’s?

From our  perspective, raising the minimum wage is a job killer…If the minimum wage were increased, there would be price inflation for consumers or we would likely employ fewer people. —Domino’s Pizza CEO David Brandon. Note: according to their 10-K filings, Domino’s & their franchisees currently employ 220,000 people, an increase of more than 70,000 (almost 30%) since 2004.

2011: Sick leave means “some people will go out of business”?

The hardest thing in the world is to run a small restaurant. As far as the whole labor thing goes, we’ll have to see how it plays out. But ultimately, I hate to say it, I think some people will go out of business. —Ethan Stowell on sick leave. Note: Restaurant employment in King County has increased by 3,200 jobs since sick leave was implemented.

2011: Sick leave will cost Seattle $90 million a year?

Mandatory paid sick days could cost Seattle businesses and consumers between $30 million and $90 million a year.…Mandatory paid sick leave is likely to impact small businesses, restaurants and the hospitality industry the hardest. — Washington Policy Center briefing on economic impact of Seattle paid sick leave ordinance Note: A year later, Tom Douglas, who opposed the paid sick leave law,  estimated it was only costing about one-third of what his company initially projected for the 650 eligible employees at his restaurants.

2013: "It really hurts" that $15 will force layoffs at Cedarbrook?

I am shaking here tonight because I am going to be forced to lay people off for something that is not their fault, something they have no control over,” he said. “I’m going to take away their livelihood. That hurts. It really, really hurts. —Scott Ostrander, manager of the Cedarbrook Lodge in SeaTac testifying in opposition to a $15/hour wage. Note: After $15 for hotels was implemented, he told KIRO TV that they are expanding “not in spite of Proposition 1 but actually as a recovery method to Proposition 1 to try to recoup significant expenses that will be incurred as a result of Proposition 1.”

2013: $15 + “razor-thin margins” will mean lost jobs at MasterPark? 

Roger McCracken, managing partner of MasterPark, which gave $31,890 to fight Proposition 1, has said the company may have to automate some jobs if the measure passes. “We’re on a razor-thin margin as it is,” he told Bloomberg News. —Roger McCracken, manager of Master Park. Note: After $15 for parking lots was implemented, “he called layoffs “foolish” and rejected the notion that cashiers soon would be replaced by automation”

The full report is available online for immediate release

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Contact: Sage Wilson, Working Washington: sage@workingwa.org

Lining up in the rain, Seattle speaks out in support of $15

Hundreds of community members stood in the pouring rain, outside of Town Hall Seattle, donning bright red t-shirts emblazoned with a giant yellow “15” on the chest. We were out in force two hours early to show our support of $15 for Seattle at the first public $15 minimum wage hearing. Sure we got a little wet, but it was worth it as supporters of $15 filled the room and took to the testimonial microphones. It sounded a little something like this:

“When you raise the wage of regular people, they are not going to sit on it. They are going to go out and spend it, helping everyone.”

“We need a higher minimum wage now so that Seattle is a race to the top, not a race to the bottom.”

“I support a $15 min wage because it will empower women. They're a majority in low wage work. This will change women's lives.”

Media was out in droves snapping photos, interviewing workers, and broadcasting live feeds as supporters of $15 overwhelmed the room.

"‘Historic moment’: Hundreds pack minimum-wage hearing” – Seattle Times

“Hundreds turn out for Seattle’s town hall on $15 minimum wage issue” – Q 13 Fox News

It was definitely a strong showing of support of $15 for Seattle.

Speaking of support, the mayor has set up an Online Town Hall. Share your input on why you support $15 to lift workers out of poverty and boost the economy.

http://incomeinequality.mindmixer.com/

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."