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GOP TRICK: min wage bill increases sub-min wage sweatshops

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genius Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Mar-08-05 09:15 PM
Original message
GOP TRICK: min wage bill increases sub-min wage sweatshops
Below is an alert sent out by former congressional candidate Mike Byron.


http://www.nathannewman.org/laborblog/archive/002263.shtml
THIS is THE set of issues for Democrats (and Progressives generally) to go on the attack on NOW!



March 06, 2005

Santorum's Sweatshop Expansion Bill

Sweatshops Expanded, Overtime Attacked, and State Minimum Wage Laws Undermined

This is as low as it goes, as the GOP fights to expand sub-minimum wage sweatshops across the country. Pennsylvania's Rick Santorum is leading the charge for a GOP bill that would ostensibly raise the minimum wage by $1.10 per hour, but in reality would cut wages for millions of American workers and expand unregulated sweatshops across the country.

As this Economic Policy Institute analysis details, the bill is a trojan horse for assaulting workers rights.

Licensing Sweatshops: While a $1.10 per hour minimum wage increase by itself would help 1.8 million workers, Santorum includes a poison bill exempting any business with revenues of $1 million or less from regulation -- raising the exemption from the current $500,000 level.

The upshot: while 1.2 million workers could qualify for a minimum wage increase, another 6.8 million workers, who work in companies with revenues between $500,000 and $1,000,000 per year, would lose their current minimum wage protection.

And an even larger number of businesses, those with revenues under $7 million, would be exempt from fines under a range of other safety, health, pension and other labor laws. Essentially, the realm of unregulated sweatshops would be expanded and legalized under Santorum's bill.

Killing Overtime: It gets worse-- the 40-hour work week would be abolished and companies would not have to pay overtime if they cut hours the next week. The proposal is called "flex time", but workers would have no say in the matter. Their hours could be rearranged, upsetting child care and other weekly routines, and companies would no longer have the deterrent of having to pay overtime as a way to encourage giving workers a regular weekly schedule.

Banning State Minimum Wage Laws: But here's a kicker from a GOP supposedly dedicated to states rights. Santorum's bill would ban states from requiring employers to pay tipped workers with a guaranteed wage. Employers could pay tipped workers nothing and force them to live off tips, while states would be preempted from creating a higher wage standard for tipped workers.

The federal Fair Labor Standards Act specifically guarantees states the right to impose higher wage standards than the federal law. One area where many states have a higher standard than federal law is for tipped workers, who are guaranteed only $2.13 per hour in wages under federal law and can be forced to credit their tips against the required federal wage level. Many states have a higher minimum wage for tipped workers or have abolished the so-called "tip credit" altogether and let workers keep their tips, without allowing employers to reduce their salary below the regular minimum wage level.

With Santorum's bill as law, you would end up with a situation where small and even medium size restaurants and other businesses with tipped employees would be exempt from the federal minimum wage, and state governments would be barred from requiring employers to pay actual wages to tipped workers. Essentially, those workers could be hired for zero dollars and told they had to live only off tips, however little those were.

The attack on the tip credit is bad enough, but the precedent of the federal government creating a MAXIMUM standard for wage regulation and restricting the right of states to create a higher standard is even more dangerous. Because of federal inaction, states across the country have raised their minimum wages -- Red State Florida raised theirs just last fall and indexed it to inflation -- and many more are thinking about it. (See the chart below)

If Santorum and the GOP can push through a restriction on states' ability to raise standards for tipped workers, the next step could easily be a restriction on states being allowed to have ANY minimum wage higher than the federal level at all.

The City Minimum Wage Precedent: Sound too far-fetched even for rightwing politicians? Well, after a number of cities began enacting city minimum wage laws, about a dozen southern and western states, including Florida, Louisiana and Georgia, passed legislation banning local governments from enforcing local minimum wages higher than the federal minimum wage level. Backed by the conservative American Legislative Exchange Council, these "minimum wage repeal acts" are the model for the national GOP going further and preempting state minimum wage laws, just as they recently preempted state class action laws and just as they have preemped state health care and environmental regulation. (See this post today on the full range of conservative's preempting progressive state laws).

Taking the fight to the states: Right now, there is an upsurge of grassroots energy working to raise the minimum wage at the state level. Despite the Florida legislature banning local minimum wage laws, Florida voters last fall, by a vote of 72%, raised their overall minimum wage by $1 per hour -- and raised the wage for tipped workers by the same amount. Other states are raising the minimum wage far higher than the federal level-- Washington State now has a $7.35 per hour minimum wage, and San Francisco has a $8.62 per hour city minimum wage.

The GOP now knows that it's not enough to just keep blocking minimum wage increases at the federal level; they have to stomp on these new state initatives as well. The Santorum bill is the first step in the rightwing goal of not only restricting federal law but gutting the ability of states to take action against sweatshops as well.

Pounding Santorum and the GOP: If progressives miss the opportunity to smash this vote over the head of these rightwing politicians, they are truly brain-dead. While voters are closely divided on a range of social issues, even many normally Republican voters support raising the minimum wage. It's the best wedge issue in the progressive arsenal, and we get to skewer the GOP for hypocrisy on states rights to boot.

States raising minimum wage


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Lindacooks Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Mar-08-05 09:31 PM
Response to Original message
1. I KNEW it!!!
I KNEW there had to be something fishy about the Repukes wanting to help out anyone making less than a million a year. GOOD CATCH!!
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genius Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-09-05 02:16 AM
Response to Reply #1
2. They are such slimes
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ebayfool Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-09-05 02:54 AM
Response to Original message
3. Kicking & recommending!
This is important!
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Just Me Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-09-05 10:27 AM
Response to Original message
4. Is there no end to the ways the GOP will screw the very people,....
,...they are supposed to represent?

:shrug: Guess not, huh!!!
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tinanator Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-10-05 06:33 PM
Response to Reply #4
9. faster and harder YES!
Its never been like this before, whats got into them?
Oh yeah, drastic times and desperate measures, strike while the ballot is hot and the people are dumbfounded. Maybe its just a ride, why does it always have to be downhill? Traitors imposters and worse, the highest evolutionary state of weaselly disregard and avarice.
Doesnt the bible tell them not to do so as well? When Lord, WHEN?
judge em already.
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spunky Donating Member (469 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-09-05 01:24 PM
Response to Original message
5. Of course. Looks like it would work perfectly with their immigration plan
More jobs that don't qualify for minimum wage protection = fewer americans willing to take the job.

Bush wants to bring in immigrants to take jobs that Americans won't.

Thus, Mexicans come to America, to work for peanuts, increasing the wealth of the business owners and leaving more Americans jobless.

As much as I hate them, I almost have to admire their ability to put all the pieces perfectly in place to make their plans run without a hitch. :mad:
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DebJ Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-09-05 05:57 PM
Response to Original message
6. Thanks! As a Pa Dem, I saved this in my Santorum file. Also
sent it to 30 other Dems. I will be editing out the Republican bashing lines, keeping the facts, erasing the Santorum connection, and asking voters in my district if they approve of such policies and, in general, of this type of approach.
When they say no way, THEN I'll reveal it is Santorum.

Come on, Ricky, keep giving me the ammunition!!!

(I noticed he introduced new legislation on Friday but it is quite lengthy and I haven't had time to read it yet.)

Nothing so fine as giving them their own rope and letting them hang themselves! Karma!
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sandnsea Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-09-05 08:13 PM
Response to Original message
7. TWO min wage amends.
Just to try to keep everybody clear.

And in 2006 they'll use this one to say Dems voted against min wage when they had a chance, and dumbass Dems will say "why is so-and-so wishy-washy on min wage".
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genius Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-10-05 05:49 PM
Response to Reply #7
8. We need to spread the word. EOM
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