State
Senate targets the working poor
By Rev. Sandra L. Strauss
Patriot News (PA), 4/26/06
There
is a game that seems to be all the rage in Harrisburg.
It involves legislators seeking to outmaneuver
one another, with the winner being the one who
passes the most legislation for his or her side
-- or stops the most legislation on the other
side.
I'm
looking for a name. I considered "King of
the Capital," but that implies only one gender
can win. "Monarch of the Capital" just
doesn't have the same ring. How about "Grand
Pooh-Bah of PA"?
This
might be funny were it not for the all too real
tragic consequences for thousands of Pennsylvanians.
On
April 5, the House passed overwhelmingly (145-50)
an amended version of a bill to increase the minimum
wage in Pennsylvania, bringing it close to the
original version. The final outcome would be the
same -- an increase to $7.15 an hour, versus only
$6.25 an hour in an earlier amendment. Missing
is a cost of living adjustment that was in the
original bill. While it could have been better,
it was an improvement for many who believe that
a raise in the minimum wage is long past due.
Despite
such strong support in the House, we have seen
little action in the Senate. In December, Senate
Majority Leader David J. "Chip" Brightbill,
R-Lebanon, promised to bring a vote on the minimum
wage to the floor by the end of January. That
deadline passed with no real explanation why.
The word from colleagues who track potential votes
more closely than I is that there are enough votes
in the Senate to support House Bill 257 in its
current form. Unfortunately, the bill now rests
with the Senate Labor and Industry Committee,
where a majority opposes an increase and, I suspect,
has little interest in allowing this bill to reach
the Senate floor.
I'm
guessing that there are two reasons: (1) this
is an election year, and passage might be seen
as helping the governor; (2) no vote means the
bill dies when the two-year session ends at the
end of 2006.
Of
course, it isn't the Senate or Sen. Brightbill
who will pay; it is the thousands of Pennsylvanians
trying to exist on hourly rates that put them
below the poverty line.
A
Quinnipiac poll conducted early in 2005 showed
that a majority of Pennsylvanians supports increasing
the minimum wage. And despite Sen. Brightbill's
claims to the contrary, there are thousands of
Pennsylvanians in his district and throughout
the state who would benefit. A Keystone Research
Center report estimates that 427,000 Pennsylvania
workers who earn less than $7.14 an hour would
benefit (even the Commonwealth Foundation, who
opposes an increase, puts this number at 350,000).
Many
more just above $7.15 an hour are likely to benefit
as well. The KRC report also explodes the myth
that most of these low wage workers are youth
-- nearly 71 percent of those who would benefit
from an increase to $7.15 an hour are adults.
The
inflation adjusted 1968 wage would be around $9.15
an hour in today's dollars. Without an increase
in nine years, the value of the $5.15-an-hour
wage has eroded considerably. An increase to $6.25
an hour, while better than nothing, would only
bring minimum wage workers UP TO poverty level.
The fact that some of our legislators are playing
games in light of these numbers is unconscionable.
Everyone
who works for a living deserves a living wage.
No one who works full-time should be mired below
the poverty line unable to support a family without
public assistance. Many of our elected officials
complained that their salaries were insufficient
when they voted for their own pay raise last summer.
If over $69,000 a year isn't enough (the bottom
end of legislators' salaries in 2005), then how
can $10,700 a year, more often than not without
health benefits, possibly be enough for someone
earning minimum wage?
On
April 18, the Governing Board of the Pennsylvania
Council of Churches adopted a resolution calling
for the General Assembly to treat workers justly
and raise the minimum wage. In doing so, we join
the national "Let Justice Roll" Living
Wage campaign in saying, "A job should keep
you out of poverty, not keep you in it."
Note
to all who represent us in Harrisburg: politics
may win in this game you are playing, but there
are real losers, many of whom are your constituents.
The
time to end this mockery of justice is now. We
call on all legislators to quit playing politics,
quit making excuses, and move minimum wage legislation
that benefits hard working Pennsylvanians immediately.
THE
REV. SANDRA L. STRAUSS is director of public advocacy
for the Pennsylvania Council of Churches, based
in Harrisburg.
Copyright
©2006 Sandra Strauss
###
|