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California Gov.
Arnold Schwarzenegger signed AB 1835 by
Assemblymember Sally Lieber, D-Mountain View,
that will raise the minimum wage to $8 an hour
by Jan. 1, 2008, which is greater than any
other state.
"Raising
the minimum wage is something I have wanted to
do for a long time and I am happy that this
year, we have the right bill and the
powerhouse economy we need to get this
done," said Gov. Schwarzenegger.
"Since I came into office, we have added
nearly 600,000 new jobs, unemployment is less
than 5 percent, and the state's revenues are
up by almost $20 billion. The California
economy is a raging, roaring success and now
is the time to make sure that everyone is
getting to share in this prosperity."
Currently,
the minimum wage is $6.75 an hour. The $1.25
increase in the minimum wage will be phased
in, with an increase of 75 cents on January 1,
2007 and an increase of 50 cents on January 1,
2008. The last time the minimum wage was
raised was more than 4 years ago in January
2002.
In 2004, Gov.
Schwarzenegger vetoed a bill that would have
hiked the minimum wage by $1 because it was
"not the time to create barriers to our
economic recovery or reverse the momentum we
have generated." In 2005, he said he
would have been willing to sign a $1 minimum
wage increase, but was forced to veto a
measure that contained indexing, saying the
"autopilot mechanism fails to account for
changes in the economy which could have
deleterious effects on the economic health of
the state."
According to
2004 U.S. Census Bureau data (the most current
information available):
*More than 1
million Californians earned the minimum wage
in 2004.
*Minimum wage workers made up 7.0 percent of
the 14.8 million wage and salary workers.
*Nearly 2.1 million California workers earned
$7.75 or less per hour.
*Young workers were more likely to earn
minimum wage than other age groups. One out of
every six (17 percent) California workers age
16 to 24 earned $6.75 per hour or less,
compared to just 5 percent of all workers aged
25 to 54.
*Minimum wage workers were more likely to be
women (54 percent) than men (46 percent).
*More than half (53 percent) of California
minimum wage workers were Hispanic, compared
to 31 percent of all wage and salary workers.
In fact, one out of every eight (12 percent)
Hispanic workers in California earned the
minimum wage or less in 2004.
Gov.
Schwarzenegger has taken numerous steps to
ensure the state's economy was strong enough
to allow for an increase in the minimum wage
without negatively impacting the business
climate, including:
*Cutting
Taxes: Within the first hour of taking his
oath of office, the Governor reversed the car
tax increase and returned $4 billion to the
people of California. Since then, he has
fought every effort to raise taxes including
efforts to gut California's landmark Prop. 13
which protects homeowners from losing their
homes to skyrocketing property taxes and
opposed efforts to make it easier for the
legislature to raise taxes.
*Trimming the
State's Structural Budget Deficit: The
Governor's policies grew revenues without
raising taxes while keeping spending increases
in check to dramatically reduce the state's
operating deficit this year - from a projected
$16.5 billion when he took office down to $3.5
billion today. In addition, each of Wall
Street's rating agencies has upgraded
California's credit rating this year, which
reduces the state's interest costs. At the
same time, he has increased our investment in
education by more than $8 billion over the
past two years.
*Workers
Compensation Reform: Declaring its runaway
rate increases the "poison of our
economy," Gov. Schwarzenegger fought to
reform the state's workers compensation
system, lowering premiums by more than 40
percent and saving billions of dollars this
year alone that employers can use to create
more jobs. The reforms also used objective
medical standards to ensure that workers would
be compensated based on the extent of their
injuries.
*Reducing
Frivolous Lawsuits: The Governor campaigned to
curb the most egregious abuses of the legal
system while preserving the ability of those
with actual damages to use the courts to
receive fair compensation. This effort removed
the ability for those without damages to
harass small businesses with lawsuits.
*Promoting
California: Gov. Schwarzenegger has traveled
to China, Japan and Israel to invite tourists
to visit and spend money in California,
businesses to invest and create jobs in the
state and for our global neighbors to savor
California grown agricultural products. He has
also personally starred in a billboard
reminding companies from across the country
that California is open for business.
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