Is $15 too high for a minimum wage? The real conversation is starting
Raising the minimum wage is supported by the majority of Americans, but it seems that $15 is just too much for some to handle.
That’s the hourly rate fast food workers in New York secured last week for all jobs in their industry. The new minimum, which is set to go into effect statewide in 2021, will be tied for the highest in the world with Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Seattle, reported the Guardian. And as fast food workers in New York celebrate the victory, others in major cities across the country have taken to protesting in hopes of getting similar results.
But the New York decision has been met with backlash, and not just from the usual suspects like CEOs and conservative politicians, but from people who essentially say “$15 is just too damn high for me to be cool with.” In a poll taken earlier this year in Washington and Oregon, most people supported raising the minimum wage—but 57% opposed raising it as high as $15.
Take this quote, from a friendly Facebook exchange within my circle over the weekend:
These people think it’s okay to make just as much as a doctor going through residency (I know one who makes $10 an hour) who work over 60 hours a week…oh wait and who have 8+ years of higher education under their belt and are approximately $200,000 in debt as a result of that education. GIVE. ME. A. BREAK!
It’s not hard to see why some people might have that initial reaction. A fast food worker might not have even graduated high school. In fact, about one in three fast food workers were of high school age, found a 2013 study.
Personally, I was about three years out of school before I hit that $15 hourly mark. Which is to say: a lot of us might understand that visceral reaction to a $15 minimum wage.
But then there’s this viral Facebook post from Jens Rushing, a paramedic who defends the move even though he only make $15 an hour for his job which presumably saves lives and costs a lot of time and effort to get into.
The key phrasing in his defense of the new minimum being: “If any job is going to take up someone’s life, it deserves a living wage. If a job exists and you have to hire someone to do it, they deserve a living wage.” The post has, as of now, been shared nearly 4,000 times, and most of the feedback on it is positive.
Many New York fast food workers currently make $8.75, today’s minimum wage for the state. Up to 180,000 families stand to be lifted out of poverty or near poverty thanks to the new $15 minimum, estimates Working Families, a minimum wage advocacy group, which dismisses concerns that the shift will only help some at the greater expense of the economy.