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Thursday, October 10, 2024

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Florida picks up the pieces after Hurricane Milton; Georgia elected officials say Hurricane Helene was a climate change wake-up call; Hosiers are getting better civic education; the Senate could flip to the GOP in November; New Mexico postal vans go electric; and Nebraska voters debate school vouchers.

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Civil rights groups push for a voter registration deadline extension in Georgia, federal workers helping in hurricane recovery face misinformation and threats of violence, and Brown University rejects student divestment demands.

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Hurricane Helene has some rural North Carolina towns worried larger communities might get more attention, mixed feelings about ranked choice voting on the Oregon ballot next month, and New York farmers earn money feeding school kids.

Report: Minimum wage hikes don't lead to job losses

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Tuesday, September 24, 2024   

As the city of Boulder considers raising its minimum wage on Oct. 10, a new report suggested the move would have little or no impact on job loss.

Ben Zipperer, senior economist for the Economic Policy Institute and the report's author, said workers earning the minimum wage are disproportionately women and people of color, not teenagers. He explained the data show efforts to raise the wage floor brings real benefits for workers.

"They have done so in a way that doesn't cause any big negative employment shocks or big disruptions in the local economy," Zipperer reported. "Minimum wages have largely been successful in their primary aim of making it easier for low-wage workers to make ends meet."

Colorado's current minimum wage is $14.42 an hour. Boulder is considering an increase of up to $16.58 in 2025. According to Economic Policy Institute estimates, a Boulder County family of four with two full-time working adults needs at least $26 an hour to cover basic expenses. Some business owners have opposed raising wages, saying the move would put them out of business.

Zipperer emphasized most of the "scare stories" he hears about minimum-wage hikes are more hypothetical than reality. Any increased labor costs are blunted by a number of factors. For example, higher wages lead to less staff turnover, which means increased productivity and fewer dollars spent on recruitment and training. It has been 15 years since Congress raised the federal minimum wage to $7.25 an hour.

Zipperer argued not raising it harms workers.

"That's really putting downward pressure on a lot of low-wage workers' wages," argued pointed out. "They're earning much less than they would, were we to actually have an updated minimum wage, rather than the outdated minimum-wage standard that we have today."

The report estimated the actual value of the federal minimum wage adjusted for inflation over the past 15 years has fallen by 29%, to $5.15 an hour. Vice President Kamala Harris has floated the idea of raising the federal minimum wage but by how much is yet to be determined.


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In Florida, the deadline to register to vote was Monday, and a Florida driver's license or Department of Motor Vehicles ID card was necessary to complete the registration. (Vilkasss/Pixabay)

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