Endorsement: Yes on Proposition 32. California’s minimum wage needs a boost
LA TimesCalifornia has an affordability crisis, with millions of people struggling to get by as prices for housing, groceries, gasoline, utilities, child care and other necessities skyrocket. The measure would increase the state’s $16-an-hour minimum wage — which is set to rise to $16.50 on Jan. 1 under current law — to $18 on Jan. 1 for companies with 26 or more workers, and $17 for companies with 25 or fewer workers, which would have until 2026 to start paying $18. But the impact to employers and workers will be light in many of California’s big cities, which have set their own, higher minimum wages that surpass the state’s. They also note that low minimum wages subsidize businesses that don’t pay their workers enough to get by in our state, shifting the cost to taxpayer-funded social safety net programs. Opponents argue that pushing the minimum wage higher will cut into businesses’ profit margins and force them to raise prices, cut workers’ hours and cause some businesses to close.