Maine raised and then lowers minimum wage

Wyatt earp

Diamond Member
Apr 21, 2012
69,975
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No surprise here...



And lots of Maineā€™s restaurant workers were thrilled.

The minimum wage for tipped workers in Maine is half that of the stateā€™s regular minimum wage ($9). Itā€™s called the ā€œtip creditā€ rule, as it allows employers to take a credit of up to 50 percent from their employeesā€™ wages, because servers will generally make that money back (and hopefully more) in tips. If tips and wages, together, don't equal the state's minimum wage, employers are required to make up the difference.



But, at Novemberā€™s referendum, the Maine House voted to raise the minimum wage by $1 each year (through 2024) and to remove the tip credit rule entirely, meaning that all employees ā€” tipped or not ā€” would be earning the stateā€™s minimum wage, reports the Portland Press Herald.

That's when something unexpected happened.

State Senator James Dill, a Democrat who initially voted to raise wages, told the Washington Post that after the Nov. referendum passed, he received ā€œhundredsā€ of calls and emails from servers who were worried about their livelihood.

As a result, Dill threw his support behind a Republican measure to return the ā€œtip creditā€ rule. After passing through the Senate on June 7, the bill was brought before the House on June 13, where it passed with a vote of 110-37.

Maine Governor Paul LePage signed the bill into law last week. It will go into effect 90 days after Legislature adjourned, reports the Bangor Daily News.

As the Washington Post reports, servers were worried about the ramifications of the new laws for two reasons: first, that it would force employers to raise prices on their menu items, which could affect their current tips; and second, and perhaps more importantly, that employers might be forced to cut serversā€™ shifts as a result.

ā€œI donā€™t need to be ā€˜saved,ā€™ and Iā€™ll be damned if small groups of uninformed people are voting on my livelihood,ā€ said Sue Vallenza, a Maine bartender who spoke to the Post. Vallenza further said sheā€™s already seeing less in tips as a result of customers who believe the wage hike had already went into effect.

As the Post notes, labor activists are bracing themselves for similar outcries in Minnesota, New York, Massachusetts and Washington, D.C., but critics say that Maineā€™s servers donā€™t speak for the countryā€™s restaurant workers.


Maine restaurant workers successfully lobby to lower the minimum wage





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It's funny when people really get informed when it comes to their pocket book they vote conservative...


So remind us again why do poor people vote against their own self interest?


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As the Post notes, labor activists are bracing themselves for similar outcries in Minnesota, New York, Massachusetts and Washington, D.C., but critics say that Maineā€™s servers donā€™t speak for the countryā€™s restaurant workers.





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No surprise here...



And lots of Maineā€™s restaurant workers were thrilled.

The minimum wage for tipped workers in Maine is half that of the stateā€™s regular minimum wage ($9). Itā€™s called the ā€œtip creditā€ rule, as it allows employers to take a credit of up to 50 percent from their employeesā€™ wages, because servers will generally make that money back (and hopefully more) in tips. If tips and wages, together, don't equal the state's minimum wage, employers are required to make up the difference.



But, at Novemberā€™s referendum, the Maine House voted to raise the minimum wage by $1 each year (through 2024) and to remove the tip credit rule entirely, meaning that all employees ā€” tipped or not ā€” would be earning the stateā€™s minimum wage, reports the Portland Press Herald.

That's when something unexpected happened.

State Senator James Dill, a Democrat who initially voted to raise wages, told the Washington Post that after the Nov. referendum passed, he received ā€œhundredsā€ of calls and emails from servers who were worried about their livelihood.

As a result, Dill threw his support behind a Republican measure to return the ā€œtip creditā€ rule. After passing through the Senate on June 7, the bill was brought before the House on June 13, where it passed with a vote of 110-37.

Maine Governor Paul LePage signed the bill into law last week. It will go into effect 90 days after Legislature adjourned, reports the Bangor Daily News.

As the Washington Post reports, servers were worried about the ramifications of the new laws for two reasons: first, that it would force employers to raise prices on their menu items, which could affect their current tips; and second, and perhaps more importantly, that employers might be forced to cut serversā€™ shifts as a result.

ā€œI donā€™t need to be ā€˜saved,ā€™ and Iā€™ll be damned if small groups of uninformed people are voting on my livelihood,ā€ said Sue Vallenza, a Maine bartender who spoke to the Post. Vallenza further said sheā€™s already seeing less in tips as a result of customers who believe the wage hike had already went into effect.

As the Post notes, labor activists are bracing themselves for similar outcries in Minnesota, New York, Massachusetts and Washington, D.C., but critics say that Maineā€™s servers donā€™t speak for the countryā€™s restaurant workers.


Maine restaurant workers successfully lobby to lower the minimum wage





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I wonder who this Sue Vallenza is? She sounds Latino and yup we were right, Latinos are conservative at heart.



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