Imagine working 40 hours a week, 52 weeks a year and not having money to
pay rent, put gas in the car or eat.
This November, the people of Arizona have the chance to act where business
and government have failed. We can vote to raise the minimum wage by voting
"yes" on Proposition 202.
Proposition 202 is about doing the right thing and rewarding hard work.
It's been 10 years since Congress voted to raise the minimum wage. Since then,
the real value of the minimum wage has dropped to its lowest level in 51 years.
Yet while members of Congress haven't seen fit to raise the minimum wage for
millions of low-wage workers, they have received nine pay raises since 1997.
For working people and our families, a good, middle-class life is growing
out of reach. Proposition 202 would raise the minimum wage in Arizona to $6.75
starting Jan. 1. Each year, the minimum wage would be adjusted to keep up with
inflation.
Research shows that employment and payrolls in small businesses grow faster
in states that have a minimum wage above the federal level of $5.15. This makes
sense. If working people get a raise, they take the money and spend it on
essentials, like clothes, food and housing. Money is put back into the economy,
making it grow stronger.
Business groups have tried to confuse the issue by introducing the question
of privacy into the debate around Proposition 202. They are using a fabricated
civil-liberty issue in an attempt to keep the public from voting to raise people
out of poverty. Talking about privacy diverts attention from what's at stake for
working families — a raise.
About 145,000 workers in Arizona would benefit from an increase in the
minimum wage to $6.75. State statistics show that nearly 75 percent of
minimum-wage workers are adults. Some are senior citizens who must return to
work to pay for the skyrocketing cost of medications.
More than 58 percent of minimum-wage workers in Arizona are women; more
than one-third are the primary wage earners for their families, according to the
Economic Policy Institute, a nonprofit, nonpartisan Washington think tank.
The same study also estimates that 200,000 children in Arizona live in
families that would be affected by an increase in the minimum wage. For these
children, an increase can mean moving out of poverty, which means gaining access
to better food, shelter, health care and education.
We can be sure businesses won't raise the minimum wage. And we've seen that
we can't count on Congress to change it. The people of Arizona can only depend
on each other to do what's right for working families.
This November, vote yes to raising the minimum wage. Vote "yes" on
Proposition 202.
Rebekah Friend is president of the Arizona AFL-CIO and
honorary co-chair of the Arizona Minimum Wage Coalition. Write to her at
info [at] azaflcio [dot] org.
© 2006 Rebekah Friend





