For
Immediate Release: November 13, 2006
Contact: Betsy Leondar-Wright, Let Justice Roll
781-704-4039 (cell), betsy@classmatters.org
BUSINESS
LEADERS AND MINIMUM WAGE ORGANIZERS ON LANDSLIDE
VICTORIES, WHAT'S NEXT? POST-ELECTION TELECONFERENCE
HIGHLIGHTS AND REPLAY AVAILABLE
Business
leaders joined national Let Justice Roll campaign
leaders and minimum wage ballot organizers from
Arizona, Colorado, Missouri, Montana and Ohio
to analyze the historic minimum wage election
victories and look ahead to future state campaigns
and congressional legislation to raise the $5.15-an-hour
federal minimum wage.
If
you missed the Nov. 9 teleconference, click
here to listen.
EXCERPTS
from the teleconference:
--
SMALL-BUSINESS OWNER, MISSOURI: Lew Prince,
co-owner, Vintage Vinyl, St. Louis:
"The ballot issue won in Missouri by a million
votes, in a state where the senate race was decided
by about 60,000 votes, which shows just how across
the board the support was. My focus was on speaking
to small businessmen. It was easy to point out
that the increase made straightforward economic
sense: Simply put, a minimum wage increase would
mean an extra 150 or 200 bucks a month in the
hands of people who are going to spend it, and
spend it here in Missouri. We also reminded small
business of something they already know: Keeping
workers is easier and cheaper than finding and
training new ones -- you get lower recruiting
and training costs, you get decreased absenteeism,
you get increased worker morale. And every small
business owner knows that the longer an employee
stays with you, the more they know about your
business and the higher their productivity. The
long-range 'cost' of the minimum wage isn't a
cost but rather a benefit. And no one could look
me in the eye and say $5.15 an hour is a living
wage."
--
VENTURE CAPITALIST: Adnan Durrani, president
of Condor Ventures, Stamford, CT; venture partner,
Blue Chip Venture Capital, Cincinnati, OH:
"From the point of view of a venture capitalist,
especially in Ohio. [where] we've invested in
over 120 companies, the economic case for minimum
wage is closed and shut. It is a sound business
decision to increase the minimum wage. We've had
way too low wages for way too long. The facts
are very clear versus the misinformation that's
been spread over the years. Ninety percent of
each one-dollar increase in the minimum wage directly
impacts the economy. At the top income levels,
only 2 percent trickles down into the economy.
There's a direct lever in the minimum wage increase.
It increases employment. It increases retail sales.
It increases the distribution of income. It uplifts
all social and economic factors both locally and
nationally."
--
REV. PAUL SHERRY, NATIONAL COORDINATOR, LET JUSTICE
ROLL CAMPAIGN and co-author, "A
Just Minimum Wage: Good for Workers, Business
and Our Future":
"Before the election, we along with others
succeeded in getting the minimum wage raised in
states like Pennsylvania, Michigan, North Carolina,
West Virginia and Arkansas. Now, we've had six
major new victories. This provides additional
momentum for us to move minimum wage forward at
the federal level and in additional states. Let
Justice Roll and our partners succeeded in making
minimum wage THE values issue of the 2006 electoral
campaign. It's an issue that brings people together
across all lines. We believe -- and people responded
to this -- a job should keep you out of poverty,
not keep you in it."
--
REV. BOB EDGAR, general secretary, National
Council of Churches, former congressman, and author,
"Middle Church: Reclaiming the Moral Values
of the Faithful Majority from the Religious Right":
"This election shows the moral values of
the nation are coming strongly back to real issues
like lifting the minimum wage and moving forward
to a living wage. It shows that business leaders,
conservatives, moderates and progressives joined
together and said if we are going to ask people
to work 52 weeks of the year to care for their
families they should not be showing up in the
Salvation Army food kitchens or in the homeless
shelters. They should get enough wages to care
for all of their families. The faith community,
the labor community, the business community, all
sectors of society have stood up and spoken out
clearly, that the minimum wage needs to be lifted."
--
ARIZONA: Rev. Trina Zelle, lead organizer,
Let Justice Roll Arizona, Tempe:
"People have voted their values. Despite
the ever changing objections to an increase in
the minimum wage by our opponents -- ranging from
identity theft to economic meltdown -- people
of faith and conscience understand that this is
an issue of basic fairness -- hard work should
keep you out of poverty not keep you in it. LJR
educated and mobilized the larger faith community
at every step on an every level of this campaign
-- from initial petition gathering, to voter education
to get out the vote activities. The partnerships
and alliances that have been formed will continue
to function as we continue to work for economic
justice for all."
--
COLORADO: Terri McMaster, leader in Let
Justice Roll Colorado, and director, Lutheran
Advocacy Ministry, Denver:
"It was no surprise that Colorado voters
wanted to pass a minimum wage increase. The big
surprise was the huge amount of money the restaurant
and resort industries were willing to spend to
fight it, with a lot going to TV ads railing against
the idea of putting automatic adjustments for
inflation in our Constitution. They even ran a
TV ad with a cartoon Moses character crying out
to God to intervene so we don’t
'chisel this into stone.' It was clearly our intensive
grassroots effort, in which the Let Justice Roll
campaign was one of the leaders, that convinced
voters that raising the minimum wage was the right
thing to do, and kept big-money advertising from
winning the day. The Let Justice Roll campaign
here included a broad, diverse coalition of faith
communities, with the support of more than 20
denominations and religious organizations, and
Christian, Jewish and Muslim faith leaders."
--
MISSOURI: Rev. Audrey Hollis, lead organizer,
Let Justice Roll Missouri, St. Louis:
"I had never worked on a campaign that engaged
so many different people, organizations and congregations.
This was something we knew right away would make
a difference in our communities. As Let Justice
Roll coordinator, we were able to engage 2,000
congregations across Missouri to participate in
this campaign. Raising the minimum wage in Missouri
gives hope that change in other areas of economic
justice is possible." Congratulations and
many thanks to all our coalition partners -- Give
Missourians a Raise, Jobs with Justice, the AFL-CIO,
Missouri Pro-Vote, SEIU, UFCW, ACORN, Teamsters,
all of our faith partners and all the good people
of Missouri for voting 76 percent in favor of
raising the minimum wage."
--
MONTANA: Doug Mitchell, campaign manager,
Raise Montana, Helena:
"The Montana minimum wage initiative passed
with roughly 73 percent of the vote -- a strong
bipartisan statement that is going to send a very
clear message to Washington D.C., that even quote
'Red states' like Montana stand firmly behind
workers. Key to Montana's campaign -- a volunteer-driven,
very low budget campaign -- was encouraging people
to speak in their own voices. This was not a divisive
campaign but rather a campaign that brought people
together. That's why Montanans from every single
legislative district and every county voted overwhelmingly
in favor of raising the minimum wage and taking
politics out of it in the future by providing
cost of living adjustments."
--
OHIO: Katy Heins, lead organizer, Let
Justice Roll Ohio, Cincinnati:
"The victory for minimum wage in Ohio can
be attributed to a grassroots effort lead by a
coalition of groups. Let Justice Roll Ohio had
a truly interfaith, multi denominational, urban,
suburban and rural effort in Ohio -- also bringing
in many of the evangelical voices looking for
a broader social agenda in Ohio and the nation.
CNN exit poll information showed that the majority
of all 'church goers' in Ohio from weekly to intermittent
attendance voted in favor of the minimum wage."
Mr.
Prince and Mr. Durrani are inaugural signatories
to the Business Owners and Executives for a Higher
Minimum Wage statement available at http://www.letjusticeroll.org/pressroom/ljrpressrelease-10-31.html.
For
interviews with Rev. Sherry, state organizers,
Mr. Durrani, Mr. Prince and other business leaders,
or a copy of "A Just Minimum Wage: Good for
Workers, Business and Our Future," contact
Betsy Leondar-Wright, 781-704-4039 (cell), betsy@classmatters.org.
For direct Let Justice Roll state contact information,
visit http://www.letjusticeroll.org/
stateminimumwagecampaigns-contacts.html.
For
interviews with Rev. Edgar contact Dan Webster,
212-870-2252, email dwebster@councilofchurches.org.
Let
Justice Roll is a fast-growing national nonpartisan
partnership of more than 80 organizations working
for a higher minimum wage at the state and federal
level. For more information visit http://www.letjusticeroll.org.
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