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Increasing Minimum Wage Will Help Working Families

The State Senate voted, 19-13, Tuesday (January 15, 2008) to approve Senate Bill 130, raising the minimum wage from $6.50 per hour to $7.25 per hour and annually indexing the amount for inflation. 

Senator Michael Ellis (R-Neenah) and Dan Kapanke (R-La Crosse) joined 17 Democrats present in supporting the bill.  Senator Judy Robson (D-Beloit) was absent.  The bill now heads to the Republican-controlled Assembly.

In written testimony, WEAC said that increasing the state’s minimum wage from $6.50 per hour to $7.25 per hour and annually indexing the amount for inflation will help working families make ends meet.

WEAC represents 17,000 education support professionals (ESP) - the secretaries, teacher aides, bus drivers, custodians, cooks - employed in public K-12 schools. Many ESP are among those individuals struggling to just get by.

"In 2005, 58% of school districts reported starting wages for food service workers that were below the poverty level. This group was followed by aides, 53% of whom received starting wages that were below the poverty level," according to WEAC's statement. WEAC included the following table:

Percent of districts with starting wages
that are below poverty level 2005-2006

Administrative Secretary

5.80%

Aides

53.00%

Bookkeeper

0.00%

Clerical

24.00%

Comp Tech

2.00%

Cooks

40.60%

Custodian

20.00%

Food Service

58.00%

Head Cook

27.60%

Head Custodian

3.00%

Instruct. Aide

33.00%

Maintenance

1.00%

Secretaries

10.00%

Special Aide

15.60%

Source: school district salary wage schedules

WEAC noted that, as important as it is to raise the minimum wage to $7.25, that still falls short of the $9.93 per hour a full-time worker with a family of four would have needed to earn in 2007 to exceed the federal poverty level.

"Raising the minimum wage is an important step to lift all low-end wages so workers can afford basic needs such food, housing, transportation, utilities, childcare, and health care," WEAC said. "It is illogical to pay full-time school year employees such a meager wage that they drain state resources by qualifying for public assistance. This is true of workers in the private sector as well."

Posted January 18, 2008

At the Capitol News Archives