In the United States, more than 28
million people, about a quarter of the workforce between the ages of 18 and 64, are minimum wage
workers – earning less than the poverty level for their
families. Nearly two thirds are women, and almost one third
of those women are raising children.
A full-time minimum wage job covers, on average, only 34
percent of a family’s basic costs of living.
Meanwhile, U.S. corporate profits increased 21 percent in
2007 and worker productivity grew by 111 percent. According
to Market Watch, "Profits have been so high because almost
all of the benefits from productivity improvements are
flowing to the owners of capital rather than to the
workers."
Raising the minimum wage above poverty level is perhaps the
most effective instrument for combating poverty and
supporting the human rights of children, women, and people
of color in the United States. No other single issue or
movement can so directly improve the lives of the working
poor in this country.
But just wages don’t just make economic sense, they make
ethical sense.
On the basis of our faith and our basic commitment to human
dignity, UUSC is working with
Let Justice Roll and other groups to improve the
equation for working families.
Let Justice Roll -- Living Wage
UUSC colleague
organization
Let Justice Roll (LJR) is
a nonpartisan
coalition of more than 90 faith, community, labor, and
business organizations dedicated to the principle that “a
job should keep you out of poverty, not keep you in it.”
LJR has played a
key role in making wages a values issue and a moral issue.
As a broad-based coalition,
LJR reaches across partisan lines, bringing together all
groups: religious and secular; faith based, community based,
labor,
business people; liberal and conservative; all who
believe that workers deserve a living wage; and all who
believe that it is immoral that workers who care for
children, the ill, and the elderly struggle to care for
their own families.
This is not about
political parties. It’s this year’s values voter
issue. In recent years, numerous bipartisan
polls have shown growing public support, with over 80
percent of those polled favoring a wage increase. People are
aghast that so many hard workers are working and living in
this situation. We expect this issue will bring out people
who don’t always vote, and this is good for democracy.
Through events like
“Living Wage Days,” rallies, and worship services, LJR
brought the varying dimensions of this issue to the fore and
people responded.
At mid-term elections in
November 2006,
LJR helped win landslide victories for ballot
initiatives that achieved minimum-wage increases in six
states: Ohio, Colorado, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, and
Arizona. Earlier increases had been achieved through
legislative action in states as diverse as Arkansas,
California, Massachusetts, Michigan, North Carolina,
Pennsylvania, and West Virginia.
With UUSC support,
LJR continues its work by supporting living-wage
organizing in
Georgia,
Kansas, Oklahoma, and Cuyahoga County, Ohio, and
strategizing about raising the federal minimum wage to a
real living wage.