Thursday, March 26, 2009

After 20 years, Kansas finally passes minimum wage raise

Posted by Owen Morris on Thu, Mar 26, 2009 at 10:00 AM

click to enlarge giant_check_thumb_200x150.jpg

Back in February I wrote about Kansas' paltry minimum wage of $2.65 per hour and how it hadn't been raised in 20 years. A minimum-wage bill was making its way through the Kansas Senate, and experts weren't giving it much chance of

passing.

Well, School-House Rock style, the bill managed to get out of committee, get passed in the Kansas Senate and then overwhelmingly passed in the Kansas House. Now, after tweaks, it will wind up on Governor Sebelius' desk.


The bill ties Kansas' minimum wage to the federal level and would go into

effect January 1, 2010, when the federal minimum wage will be $7.25 per

hour.

According to the AP,

the House kept certain parts of the current Kansas minimum wage law intact, such as allowing employers to pay workers under 20 years old $4.25 for their

first 90 days of work. The bill doesn't affect the hourly wage of workers whose earnings are tip-based.

The former law allowed businesses that

don't engage in interstate commerce and gross under $500,000 to pay

less than minimum wage. Nearly all restaurants now accept credit cards -- meaning they engage in interstate commerce -- so they'd have to pay federal minimum wage no matter how much they

gross.

When

the bill passes it will end Kansas' tenure paying the second-lowest minimum wage in the

nation and significantly raise the pay of more than 10,000 workers. There's no estimate of

how many of those 10,000 plus workers are in the food and beverage

industry but it's probably a healthy chunk and this is their win.

Tags: , , , ,

Comments (0)

Subscribe to this thread:

Add a comment

Latest in Fat City

Slideshows

All contents ©2012 Kansas City Pitch LLC
All rights reserved. No part of this service may be reproduced in any form without the express written permission of Kansas City Pitch LLC,
except that an individual may download and/or forward articles via email to a reasonable number of recipients for personal, non-commercial purposes.
Website powered by Foundation