Thousands of Utahns could see a pay raise next year if the minimum wage is raised from the current $5.15 an hour — something Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr. said he's willing to consider.
"I don't think that's a bad idea," the governor told the Deseret Morning News, joking that his teenage son is earning the minimum wage working at a bicycle repair shop — just as he did at that age, as a dishwasher in a local restaurant.
More than a year ago, Huntsman put together a working group to look at whether an increase was needed in Utah.
But the group, headed by homeless advocate Pamela Atkinson, decided it needed more information before making a recommendation.
Now the group is getting ready to meet with the governor and legislative leaders to discuss its findings. Even if members find there's a need to raise the rate, though, it could be that Utah chooses instead to wait for federal action.
The momentum appears to be there. Voters in Arizona, Colorado, Missouri, Montana, Nevada and Ohio all agreed on Nov. 7 to raise the minimum wage paid in those states, and the incoming Democrat-controlled Congress has pledged to raise the federal minimum wage.
"We're going to keep our eye on Congress," Huntsman said, suggesting the issue ought to be addressed one way or another. "We could very well see it set by Congress.... So that would address it there."
He said he'll decide whether to make an increase part of his legislative package for the 2007 Legislature that begins meeting in mid-January after he sees the results of the state-funded study of who's being paid the minimum wage in Utah.
"We have, I think, about 13,000 to 14,000 people in this state making minimum wage," the governor said. "So how do you define that demographic? Are they high school, part-time workers, or are they single moms, which would be a real concern to me."
Although the results of the study are still being pulled together, Atkinson said fewer than 20 percent of the state's minimum wage earners are teenagers. That, she said, surprised even her.
She said the study, expected to be made public in mid-December, will break down the number of Utahns earning the minimum wage by gender, age and marital status. "We've come up with hard facts rather than myths."
Opposition to a higher minimum wage has come from the business community, especially small-business owners and the restaurant industry. The Utah Restaurant Association warned last year that an increase could mean fewer jobs.
Not so, Atkinson said. "There are still some people who believe raising the minimum wage will cause a fair amount of job losses," she said. "As we do research around the country, that is not a fact."
Still, Atkinson stopped short of saying now that the minimum wage should be raised, preferring to wait until the study is finalized and presented to the governor and lawmakers. "I won't, at this point, make a recommendation," she said.
Lawmakers came up with some $50,000 to pay for the research, she said. "I think we've got some great, great information for that money," Atkinson said. "What I want is for everybody to look at all the data and look at it fairly."
For Sen. Ed Mayne, D-West Valley and the head of the state's AFL-CIO, fair means finally passing the same bill he introduced during the 2006 Legislature to raise the minimum wage in Utah to $7.
"It would be an opportunity for the governor and my colleagues on the other side of the aisle to do what's right before the federal government does," Mayne said. "There's no question that we will have a new federal minimum wage. It's been promised by the blueing of America."
As a result of the November elections, 28 states nationwide have — or will soon have — a minimum wage that's higher than the federal rate. Recently approved rates range from $6.15 an hour in Nevada to as much as $8 an hour in California beginning in 2008.
Mayne said labor officials are being told Congress is looking at hiking the federal minimum wage to $7.25 an hour with built-in cost of living increases. An attempt to do just that earlier this year failed under the Republican-controlled Congress.
"There's certainly justifi- cation, seeing that six states this last election that had it on the ballot approved it," Mayne said, noting that four of those states — Arizona, Colorado, Nevada and Montana — are in the same region as Utah.
Utah, he said, should already be among the states that pay workers above the minimum wage. "I just think what was done last session was pretty reprehensible in us not taking the lead."
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