Tuesday, January 14, 2014

How Employers are Subverting the SeaTac $15/hr Minimum Wage Law

The latest on the SeaTac Prop 1 $15/hr minimum wage initiative that was passed last November (the campaign for which was run out of the top floor of the building where I work) appeared in a story, "Seattle Port commissioners listen to SeaTac wage activists," written last week for the Puget Sound Business Journal by Ana Sofia Knauf. Here are the first two paragraphs:
SeaTac wage activists attended a Port of Seattle Commission meeting on Tuesday [January 7] to appeal to commissioners to get a $15-per-hour minimum wage reinstated at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport. 
On Dec. 27, King County Superior Court Judge Andrea Darvas struck down part of a city of SeaTac ordinance that would have increased the minimum wage from $9.32 per hour to $15 per hour for some employees at the airport, which is run by the port, as well as others outside the airport. Her decision limited the minimum-wage increase to some hospitality workers in the city of SeaTac. Wage activists have appealed her decision to the state Supreme Court.
Service Employees International Union distributed video of a KING 5 TV story on the port commission meeting.

But last week I also got the worker perspective on the implementation of Prop 1 from a young Latina acquaintance who rides the bus I take from the light rail stop in SeaTac. She works at one of the hotels located next to the building where I work.

According to my friend, her employer, in order to get out of paying the $15/hr minimum wage passed by initiative, is laying off staff to get below 30 employees, the trigger for the $15/hr wage. My friend will earn $15/hr this month, but next month she will go back to $9.32/hr, except that the number of rooms she cleans will go up to 19 from 17.

"Very bad," she said.

Her English isn't very good, and my Spanish is unspeakable. So I had difficulty understanding what she was trying to say, but I think that was what she was getting at. I had her repeat it twice.

Now she has more work for less pay. Isn't capitalism beautiful?

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