Backing
for a living wage
By
Diane Stafford
Kansas City Star, 10/19/06
Earnestine
Kennedy can't imagine thinking that anyone should
be expected to work for $5.15 an hour.
"The
cost of everything has risen since the minimum
wage went up 10 years ago," said the owner
and operator of Just Schooling Adult Day Care
Center on Prospect Avenue.
"People
on minimum wage don't get a reduced price for
things because they're poor. They pay the same
as millionaires."
The
purchasing power of the minimum wage has eroded
20 percent since it last was raised in 1996-97.
John
Scott doesn't relish the idea of government getting
any further involved in business and the free
market, but he'll make an exception in advocating
a mandatory increase in the minimum wage.
"There
has to be an incentive for people to work, especially
when the alternative is welfare, and $5.15 an
hour isn't it," said the owner of Scott Fitnessin
the Westport area.
A
full-time minimum-wage earner - 46 percent of
all minimum-wage earners - makes just about $10,000
a year, well under the federal definition of poverty.
David
Scott (no relation to John) thinks it's in the
best interests of business to have customers who
can afford to buy its products and services, and
$5.15 an hour doesn't afford much consumption.
"I'm
not sure that anyone making an argument against
raising the minimum wage has ever had to work
and make a life on that," said the Kansas
City tax accountant at Circle Tax & Accounting.
About
three-quarters of minimum-wage earners in Missouri
are adults, not teens earning spending money.
Kennedy,
John Scott and David Scott are among many small-business
owners and operators who aren't toeing what is
perceived as the "business" position
against proposed increases in the mandated federal
or state wage floors.
Kennedy
said she long ago realized that rock-bottom wages
attracted rock-bottom workers. She pays her entry-level
workers more than the $6.50 minimum proposed on
Missouri's November ballot because she's concerned
about staff quality.
Furthermore,
she said, she sees the effects of poverty on society:
crime, to name a big one.
"And
loss of hope. When you take away hope, people
become desperate," she said. "I see
the effects of poverty. I see young adults growing
up with parents in minimum-wage jobs who can't
provide adequately for their families. It is loss
of hope."
John
Scott is concerned about the massive and growing
disparity between America's haves and have-nots.
"We
need to raise our lowest-wage workers and get
to a point where the CEOs say: 'I don't need a
third house. I don't need all this stuff.' I think
we need a conscionable effort to limit executive
pay," Scott said.
"We
need to fine-tune our ethical capitalism."
David
Scott rejects the argument that a minimum-wage
increase would be inflationary.
"Oil
prices are more inflationary than raising the
minimum wage by an amount that would still put
it lower than what any of my tax-preparation clients
pay - and they are almost all small businesses
who already pay well over the minimum wage,"
he said.
"The
minimum I see on any of my clients' payrolls is
$8 an hour. The market has already dictated. They've
decided to take care of their people."
Read
Diane Stafford's Workspace blog at KansasCity.com.
To
reach Diane Stafford, call (816) 234-4359 or send
e-mail to stafford@kcstar.com.
Copyright 2006 The Kansas City Star
http://www.kansascity.com/mld/kansascity/business/
columnists/diane_stafford/15792015.htm
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