here's the letter i was talking about... I saw it in print. The local weekly
finally updated its website.

http://www.alibi.com/editorial/section_display.php?di=2005-09-29&scn=news#12879
   Letters
[image: 
prev]<http://www.alibi.com/editorial/section_display.php?di=2005-09-29&scn=news#7>
[image: 
top]<http://www.alibi.com/editorial/section_display.php?di=2005-09-29&scn=news#top>
*Living Wage Counterpoint*

Dear *Alibi,*

You have likely made up your mind on the Living Wage increase, and I refuse
to question your good intentions. However, if you have formed your ideas
about Living Wage from the Joseph Crumb article in last week's *Alibi*,
please consider that your understanding of the matter is very one-sided.

I have seen the faces of those this proposition claims to help. Mothers and
fathers, some single, some married, working two or three jobs just to make
ends meet. It is real, and no one with a heart could remain unmoved. Low
incomes *must* be addressed, and the proposed Living Wage ordinance seems to
be a quick fix to address this social injustice. But, as with most policy,
there are unintended consequences.

A business is nothing but its bottom line, and if it shows a profit, we get
to continue the game for another fiscal quarter. Behind each business are
people. I am our business. My family is this business. Those who choose to
work with me to accomplish our goals are our business. In my case, this
means 60 employees get to take home a paycheck. Sixty souls can pay rent,
pay a bill, buy some food. And if this law costs me more than I can bring
in, then there are 60 families I have failed.

This law picks on my industry: restaurants. It will force all of us to raise
our tipped employees' base pay 109 percent, from $2.15 to $4.50. No one can
live on $2.15 an hour. It barely pays the taxes, and often not even that.
Suddenly, the proponents forgot to leave tips on the table. Tips are a big
part of a server's pay. I should know; I have to match taxes and FICA on
every penny of them. At my place, they bring in $18-$20 per hour with base
wages and tips on a slow night. They earn every red cent. It's hard,
demanding work, and my servers do it with a smile. They earn more money than
any job in the restaurant. But what's a mere $2.35 raise? Okay, with my tax
matches, call it $2.68. Multiply 12 servers by 20 hours a week times 52
weeks. It's only about $232 per month per server, but bottom-line it for me,
and it is $33,446.40 for my already highest-paid employees. Perhaps you feel
servers deserve a raise over my kitchen crew. Consider that for every price
increase I pass along, servers get an automatic wage increase just from
their average 15 percent gratuity. Perhaps I don't like having to choose
between one group over the other.

Here are some of the economic effects from my edge of the universe:

In 2004, San Francisco raised their minimum wage to $8.50 an hour (it was
adjusted to $8.62 this year). According to Kevin Westley, executive director
of the Golden Gate Restaurant Association, they generally see about 500
restaurants close every year, and 500 new ones open. In the first 3 months
of 2005, they have lost nearly 100 more restaurants than have opened in
their places. Said Westley, the biggest problem is the decrease in business
due to raising their menu prices—a mere one to two dollars on every entrée.
93 percent of restaurants have lost profits, causing 78 percent to say they
wouldn't expand within county limits. Who is expanding? Quick Serve (fast
food) restaurants with limited service. Most chains are not hurting as much;
it's the local family places with table service that are getting beat up the
worst. Living Wage proponents claim there will be no ill effects, and if
there were any they would be at the big-box retailers and cheap corporate
chains. This shows just the opposite is true.

But we don't need to look as far as San Francisco to see the impact. Last
year, Santa Fe imposed a "living wage" law. After just a year, Santa Fe is
getting cold feet, as numbers don't jibe with living wage projections and
costs are up for the city, gross receipts down, and the City Council is
considering dumping next year's automatic increase of $8.50 an hour to
$9.50. Minimum wage increases are not the panacea proponents promise. The
consensus by a majority of democratic-leaning economists said that the
steeper the increase in minimum wage, the harsher the effects on the economy
and job loss—specifically teens, who with our 39-percent increase should
expect an increase in unemployment of roughly 3.9 percent (from Robert
Whaples, Economics Professor, Wake Forest University—google it.) I maintain
that 39 percent is steep, and for restaurants, a 109-percent increase is a
running dive off a cliff.

What about Albuquerque? No one knows what this will cost in city services
and additional costs on our budget, other than some figures based on
assumptions and wild speculation that only looked at those making under the
proposed $7.50 an hour. Let's say I've worked for five years, finally made
the grade to $7.50, and suddenly some newbie is making the same I am. Think
I won't be in there demanding more? Think that wouldn't be demeaning? It is
a phenomenon called "wage compression," and it has been ignored by most
lefty think tanks, and is one big reason budget projections fail. One local
economist is projecting $33 million in increased costs, which can only mean
higher taxes or lost services.

ACORN, which is pushing the wage here, has shown that it understands the
consequences. In 1995, it sued the State of California to exempt itself from
paying the minimum wage. It argued that if it had to pay the higher wage,
the State of California to exempt itself from paying the minimum wage. It
argued that if it had to pay the higher wage, it wouldn't be able to hire as
many "activists."

Some people don't make enough money to make ends meet without help. We need
a balanced solution without hidden agendas. In a couple of months, the
governor and state Legislature will attack this problem. I'm going to ask
you to weigh the good intentions of this proposal with taking more time for
more honest debate.

*Jerry Wright
Great American Land and Cattle Co.*

 On 9/28/05, Matthew Small <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Looking at this argument:
>
> "This is the exact same argument as the minimum wage: pay people a wage
> they didn't earn because they can't compete."
>
> Makes me think you didn't read what I wrote.
>
> Question: WHY can't companies compete here in the US?
> Answer: Because it costs too much to pay our workers their wages, taxes,
> and
> FICA like Dana said.
>
> Question: WHY does it cost so much?
> Answer: Because there's a minimum wage.
>
> Question: WHY is it more cost-effective to move operations offshore?
> Answer: Because the cost of labor overseas COMBINED with a lack of a
> federal
> tariff, makes importing goods from foreign countries cheaper than
> producing
> them in the US.
>
> Question: WHAT can we do to prevent job loss?
> Answer: EITHER
>
> 1) Raise tariffs so it costs as much to sell an imported
> good produced overseas as it does to produce it here
>
> OR
>
> 2) Reduce the cost of production by eliminating the minimum
> wage and other hurdles.
>
> What you apparently haven't understood yet is that the US Government has
> imposed a production overhead cost in the form of minimum wages upon
> domestic businesses AND removed any protection those companies have in the
> form of tariffs. The effect is that now domestic companies move their jobs
> overseas. I'm asking that they either level the playing field by imposing
> tariffs OR remove the burden of production in the US. Which one do you
> want?
>
>
> Matthew Small
>
>
>
> 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|
Purchase Studio MX from House of Fusion, a Macromedia Authorized Affiliate and 
support the CF community.
http://www.houseoffusion.com/banners/view.cfm?bannerid=50

Message: http://www.houseoffusion.com/lists.cfm/link=i:5:175555
Archives: http://www.houseoffusion.com/cf_lists/threads.cfm/5
Subscription: http://www.houseoffusion.com/lists.cfm/link=s:5
Unsubscribe: http://www.houseoffusion.com/cf_lists/unsubscribe.cfm?user=89.70.5
Donations & Support: http://www.houseoffusion.com/tiny.cfm/54

Reply via email to