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In reply to the discussion: Sitting in a restaurant today I realized how much trouble we are in for [View all]ProSense
(116,464 posts)94. Someone needs
to do something about it. Here's an excellent proposal.
Dave Jamieson
Raise Minimum Wage By 35 Percent, Peg It To Inflation: Senate Dem
WASHINGTON -- Legislation introduced by Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) on Thursday included a litany of measures aimed at boosting income for low-wage workers, most notably raising the minimum wage significantly and pegging it to inflation.
Along with spending on school modernization and renewable energy development, the Rebuild America Act calls for raising the minimum wage from the current federal level of $7.25 to $9.80 -- a 35 percent hike -- over the course of two and a half years, then indexing it so it rises with the cost of living. For restaurant servers and other tipped employees, the minimum wage before tips would leap from the current $2.13 to $6.86, and then track at 70 percent of the normal minimum wage.
The bill would also require employers to offer their workers paid sick days, make more white-collar workers eligible for overtime pay that they're currently exempted from, and give more workers the right to join a union.
In short, Harkin's bill, pitched as a prescription to rebuild the American middle class, hits all the right notes for worker advocates who say low- and middle-income earners are falling behind. The package was quickly praised by groups such as the AFL-CIO federation of labor unions; the National Employment Law Project, which advocates for low-wage workers; and the Restaurant Opportunities Center United, a national group representing restaurant employees.
- more -
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/03/29/minimum-wage-tom-harkin_n_1389457.html
Raise Minimum Wage By 35 Percent, Peg It To Inflation: Senate Dem
WASHINGTON -- Legislation introduced by Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) on Thursday included a litany of measures aimed at boosting income for low-wage workers, most notably raising the minimum wage significantly and pegging it to inflation.
Along with spending on school modernization and renewable energy development, the Rebuild America Act calls for raising the minimum wage from the current federal level of $7.25 to $9.80 -- a 35 percent hike -- over the course of two and a half years, then indexing it so it rises with the cost of living. For restaurant servers and other tipped employees, the minimum wage before tips would leap from the current $2.13 to $6.86, and then track at 70 percent of the normal minimum wage.
The bill would also require employers to offer their workers paid sick days, make more white-collar workers eligible for overtime pay that they're currently exempted from, and give more workers the right to join a union.
In short, Harkin's bill, pitched as a prescription to rebuild the American middle class, hits all the right notes for worker advocates who say low- and middle-income earners are falling behind. The package was quickly praised by groups such as the AFL-CIO federation of labor unions; the National Employment Law Project, which advocates for low-wage workers; and the Restaurant Opportunities Center United, a national group representing restaurant employees.
- more -
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/03/29/minimum-wage-tom-harkin_n_1389457.html
Harkins Rebuild America Act Builds Economy for 99%
Mike Hall
Saying there can be no economic recovery without the recovery of the middle class, Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) today introduced the Rebuild America Act. The legislation would, says AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka:
<...>
The Rebuild America Act, says Trumka, addresses many unmet needs that have been ignored for far too long.
Harkin says his legislation will ensure that all workers have a right to join together and stand up for fair wages and working conditions and that employers face real penalties for violating that right.
Robert L. Borosage, co-director of the Campaign for Americas Future, says the bill:
http://www.aflcio.org/Blog/Political-Action-Legislation/Harkin-s-Rebuild-America-Act-Builds-Economy-for-99
Mike Hall
Saying there can be no economic recovery without the recovery of the middle class, Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) today introduced the Rebuild America Act. The legislation would, says AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka:
achieve shared prosperity by putting America back to work, rebuilding our infrastructure, repairing our safety net and insisting that shared sacrifice start at the topwith Wall Street and the wealthiest Americans.
<...>
The Rebuild America Act, says Trumka, addresses many unmet needs that have been ignored for far too long.
The bill would revive the manufacturing sector so we can make things in America again, increase Social Security benefits and restore the minimum wages purchasing power. Sen. Harkin recognizes that fairness requires us to ensure workers dont lose overtime protections to inflation, discourage rampant speculation on Wall Street, alleviate the cost of child care for working families and other overdue reforms.
Harkin says his legislation will ensure that all workers have a right to join together and stand up for fair wages and working conditions and that employers face real penalties for violating that right.
Robert L. Borosage, co-director of the Campaign for Americas Future, says the bill:
offers strong medicine for what ails Americaand a stunning rebuke both to those who say we cant afford to invest in our future and to those who would cut vital investments to the bone.
http://www.aflcio.org/Blog/Political-Action-Legislation/Harkin-s-Rebuild-America-Act-Builds-Economy-for-99
Harkin bill would revive the American Dream
by Lawrence Mishel and Ross Eisenbrey
Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin, the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions, has introduced a bill that shows the way to a better economic future for most Americans. The Rebuild America Act tackles many of the biggest problems that hold back the American economy and shut off opportunity for working families.
Its an omnibus bill that will increase employment by making big infrastructure investments, developing renewable energy systems, addressing unfair foreign trade practices, providing assistance to state and local governments to retain police, firefighters and teachers, ending tax breaks that encourage companies to move jobs offshore, and promoting manufacturing in the United States.
It will help workers get a decent return on their education and their work by strengthening the minimum wage and overtime laws, better protecting the right to join a union and bargain collectively, enhancing retirement security, and guaranteeing paid sick leave.
<...>
We want to particularly applaud Sen. Harkin for his courage in swimming against the tide in two critical areas: Social Security and labor policy. The Rebuild America Act rejects the notion that Social Security is too expensive and that we cant afford to meet the promises we made to Americas workers: That if they worked hard for a lifetime, they could retire with guaranteed benefits and inflation protection. Too many other politicians are ready, if not eager, to cut Social Securitys cost of living protection and to reduce benefits by raising the retirement age, no matter that such changes have the biggest impact on the retirement security of women and blue-collar and low-income workers, many of whom have seen little or no increase in life expectancy. By contrast, Sen. Harkin knows workers need more help, not less; that fewer and fewer workers have pensions; that 401(k) accounts are insufficient and undependable sources of retirement income; that Social Security is steadily replacing less and less of pre-retirement income; and that the Social Security COLA is not too generous, but rather too skimpy to keep up with the cost of health care inflation that drives the spending of older workers.
The Rebuild America Act therefore replaces the Social Security COLA formula with one that better accounts for cost inflation in the products and services that older workers pay for. It raises benefits across the board. And it pays for these improvements and addresses the programs long-term revenue shortfall by scrapping the cap eliminating the loophole that shelters incomes above $110,100 from Social security taxes.
- more -
http://www.epi.org/blog/harkin-bill-revive-american-dream/
by Lawrence Mishel and Ross Eisenbrey
Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin, the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions, has introduced a bill that shows the way to a better economic future for most Americans. The Rebuild America Act tackles many of the biggest problems that hold back the American economy and shut off opportunity for working families.
Its an omnibus bill that will increase employment by making big infrastructure investments, developing renewable energy systems, addressing unfair foreign trade practices, providing assistance to state and local governments to retain police, firefighters and teachers, ending tax breaks that encourage companies to move jobs offshore, and promoting manufacturing in the United States.
It will help workers get a decent return on their education and their work by strengthening the minimum wage and overtime laws, better protecting the right to join a union and bargain collectively, enhancing retirement security, and guaranteeing paid sick leave.
<...>
We want to particularly applaud Sen. Harkin for his courage in swimming against the tide in two critical areas: Social Security and labor policy. The Rebuild America Act rejects the notion that Social Security is too expensive and that we cant afford to meet the promises we made to Americas workers: That if they worked hard for a lifetime, they could retire with guaranteed benefits and inflation protection. Too many other politicians are ready, if not eager, to cut Social Securitys cost of living protection and to reduce benefits by raising the retirement age, no matter that such changes have the biggest impact on the retirement security of women and blue-collar and low-income workers, many of whom have seen little or no increase in life expectancy. By contrast, Sen. Harkin knows workers need more help, not less; that fewer and fewer workers have pensions; that 401(k) accounts are insufficient and undependable sources of retirement income; that Social Security is steadily replacing less and less of pre-retirement income; and that the Social Security COLA is not too generous, but rather too skimpy to keep up with the cost of health care inflation that drives the spending of older workers.
The Rebuild America Act therefore replaces the Social Security COLA formula with one that better accounts for cost inflation in the products and services that older workers pay for. It raises benefits across the board. And it pays for these improvements and addresses the programs long-term revenue shortfall by scrapping the cap eliminating the loophole that shelters incomes above $110,100 from Social security taxes.
- more -
http://www.epi.org/blog/harkin-bill-revive-american-dream/
Wouldn't it be great if this passed?
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Sitting in a restaurant today I realized how much trouble we are in for [View all]
NNN0LHI
Apr 2012
OP
It's not really anything to do with meals. it's to do with the assumption of tips.
HiPointDem
Apr 2012
#70
Those laws should be struck down. Apparently, they have become worse since I did restaurant p/r.
Cleita
Apr 2012
#107
The real problem is the attitude of the millionaire farmers...who probably aren't growing a damn
nanabugg
Apr 2012
#69
The difference is between $8 an hour and $20 an hour, for a good manufacturing job.
pnwmom
Apr 2012
#24
Despite your well known and feeble attempts to slander posters by using terms
former9thward
Apr 2012
#13
Because you phrase those memes exactly like they do. It makes me think that this is where
Cleita
Apr 2012
#25
Sorry, but not all of us have the confidence you have. The Trustees Report also says...
sad sally
Apr 2012
#39
I think there'll be a civil war before the right-wing breaks and gives in, in the grand scheme.
Selatius
Apr 2012
#71
"Legislative modifications" = rate increase, as has been done many times in the past.
HiPointDem
Apr 2012
#74
No one who actually delves into the history and the numbers for themself can actually believe that.
HiPointDem
Apr 2012
#73
Steinbeck said that when property is gathered in too few hands it is taken away.
leeroysphitz
Apr 2012
#33
Everyone sees that the employment figures as getting better, but that's not the whole story.
Arkansas Granny
Apr 2012
#9
My son is a cook at a chain restaurant. He has been there since it openned. He has done
southernyankeebelle
Apr 2012
#19
The middle class workers who built the American economy in the early 20th century
baldguy
Apr 2012
#20
Don, the fruits and joys of living in a society in which most public policy is driven by a
indepat
Apr 2012
#31
There are many different opportunities to look around you and reach the same conclusion.
Quantess
Apr 2012
#36
We see it coming - financial issues, just like global warming, just like....but we can't think big
NRaleighLiberal
Apr 2012
#37
How do you know this is his only job? Maybe he works another job and this one trying to make as
RB TexLa
Apr 2012
#41
Yup, our systems were not designed to work based on high unemployment or shrinking wages.
TheKentuckian
Apr 2012
#44
The more I look around the more I think we're headed for an economic revolt in the not too distant future.
Initech
Apr 2012
#46
We need the jobs back in the U.S., not in China. We need tariffs or something
Sarah Ibarruri
Apr 2012
#61
The reason why the auto industry jobs paid well and had good benefits was because of unions
Major Nikon
Apr 2012
#63
I agree. In Spain, where I lived for many years, waiters are paid a living wage
Sarah Ibarruri
Apr 2012
#97
Pretty much the same way these workers are loading floor pans at 3:00 minutes into this video
NNN0LHI
Apr 2012
#89
I think the 1% running this country will get rid of the Social Security and then those working these
midnight
Apr 2012
#104
"Millionare farmers" that probably sit around complaining about Obama all day.
louis-t
Apr 2012
#106