City Council Expands Living Wage
Ordinance As our new City Council took office at the
beginning of 2008, Workers Interfaith
Network members welcomed them with
hundreds of postcards, letting
Council members know we were looking
forward to working with them to
improve the
living wage ordinance that
the previous Council passed in 2006.
In March of 2008,
the Memphis City Council voted unanimously to expand
and improve the
living wage ordinance in three ways:
1) Raise the wages of the City's temporary and part-time
workers to at least
$12 per hour
because they do not receive benefits. Previously, these workers
only had to be paid $10 per hour, the same as full-time workers who do
receive benefits. The Council's
actions puts the wages of the City's own workers
much closer to the living wage standards used for the City's service
contractors.
2) Implement an annual cost of living increase
into the living wage rate for contract
workers, beginning in July 2008.
Previously, the Memphis living wage ordinance
was
one of the few living wage laws in the country that was not indexed to
either
the federal poverty level of the
Consumer Price Index.
3) The Council is bringing Memphis Light, Gas, and Water's
contractors into compliance
with
the living wage ordinance by amending each contract as it is renewed or
initiated.
As these contracts are renewed, janitorial, tree trimming, and trench digging workers
will earn a living wage. MLGW will have to demonstrate to the Council that each contract
it initiates or renews is in compliance with the city's living wage ordinance.