NYC City Council Majority Supports Fair Wages for New Yorkers Act (7/29/10)

Momentum continues to grow for living wage legislation in New York City, as the Living Wage NYC Campaign announced yesterday that a majority of New York City Council members have now signed on in support of the Fair Wages for New Yorkers Act (Intro 251). The legislation would require developers who receive major taxpayer-funded subsidies to pay at least a living wage for the permanent jobs they create.

"Reaching this majority shows that when City Council Members are faced with a clear choice about what type of economic development our tax dollars should support, one that keeps people in poverty or one that provides a path to the middle class and supports our communities, they will make the right choice. The majority has decided that public subsidies must be used to create permanent living wage jobs," said Rev. Sekou, a member of the Living Wage NYC Coalition from the Micah Institute.

Every year New York City spends billions of taxpayer dollars to subsidize development and create jobs. Too often the permanent jobs created with these public subsidies pay poverty wages with no benefits -- whether it's retail and stockroom jobs at shopping centers, mailroom jobs in office buildings, or food service jobs at stadiums.

Under the bill, the living wage will start at $10.00 per hour - the same as under New York City's existing living wage law. Employees who are not covered by an employer-provided health plan will receive an additional $1.50 per hour wage supplement to help them purchase their own health insurance.  Both the living wage and the health benefits supplement will be adjusted each year to keep pace with the rising cost of living.

"It's great news that a majority of City Council members have taken a stand for working people in New York," said Irene R Romero, a retail worker and member of the RWDSU’s Retail Action Project (RAP). "If I made a living wage, I could pay the bills and have a little extra money to help my family more and save for school."

“Other cities, over 15 of them, have passed living wage laws and found that they create quality jobs for local residents without slowing growth,” said RWDSU President Stuart Appelbaum. “It’s time for New York City to get with the times on this issue, and ensure that publicly subsidized developments provide good-paying, stable jobs for the community. That’s the future of retail in this city, and big, subsidized developments as poverty wage centers need to become a thing of the past.”