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Submitted by Joe638NYC on Tue, 07/29/2008 - 7:08pm.
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Just trying to put everything together. Please if you have some
time, check out the other stories I tagged on this subject, while
they're not the only related articles, I learned a lot of how we got
here, and what it's going to take to get us out of this mess.
Here
again we have some more honest writing on the matter in an opinion
piece by Mike Fishman(President 32/BJ), from City Limits entitled "Low wages, High wages and nothing in between" (7/28/08):
America must correct its vast earnings gap, or the 'working poor' will continue to include far too many of us.
Last
week’s national minimum wage bump to $6.55 an hour didn’t affect New
Yorkers who were already earning a higher $7.15 minimum set by the
state. But the extra income does little for those who had been earning
the previous federal minimum of $5.85 an hour – or the 6.1 million
residents of New York state who are struggling to cover the
skyrocketing prices of milk, bread and gas with low wages.
Today,
nearly one-third of all Americans are trying to make ends meet on low
wages. And the number of low-wage jobs – primarily service jobs in
hotels, food prep, home health care and office cleaning – is growing.
In the next decade, 5 million new jobs will pay poverty-level wages
unless something is done.
Valentino Stronza, a security
officer working at a Midtown office building owned by the Paramount
Group, lives this struggle daily. He's doing his best to make ends
meet, but earning only $10 an hour from Apollo Security isn't enough
for him to provide the home he wants his son to have. To keep costs
down, he and his son share a bedroom in his sister's apartment. He
works overnight three days a week trying to put money aside so he and
his son can move into their own place, but so far, the extra money has
gone to paying off past medical expenses.
Valentino’s not alone
– according to Mayor Bloomberg’s new poverty measurement, nearly one in
four New Yorkers lives in poverty. Despite working hard to create
better futures for their families, they are making little headway in an
economy that's producing low-wage jobs like there's no tomorrow.
At
the same time, this past year marked the fifth straight year in which
the number of millionaires in our country grew – now at 10 million. The
top 1 percent of households take home 21.8 percent of all income – more
than double the 9 percent rate of 30 years ago. This is the highest
concentration of income in the hands of the wealthiest 1 percent since
1928, a year before the great stock market crash.
At no time in
our history has the disparity in income been so wide and in no other
industrialized country does the disparity come close. CEO compensation
is more than 400 times the take-home pay of an average American worker.
For an industrialized country, there is no parallel to this growing
income divide between the highest- and lowest-paid workers. Corporate
executives in England make half as much as those in America, while the
lowest-paid workers there earn a higher wage than their American
counterparts.
As we look toward the upcoming election, which
will put the fate of our country in new hands, we must demand national
policies to change the direction of our economy. Pegging the minimum
wage to a percentage of median income would raise it and then keep the
lowest paid workers on pace with future increases of the rest of the
workforce. Expanding the Earned Income Tax Credit – a cost that would
be offset by closing tax loopholes for the very wealthy – would also
help those low-income families teetering on the brink of poverty.
Locally,
a citywide policy requiring publicly financed development projects to
pay prevailing wages and benefits to the workers who build and maintain
the sites would ensure that newly created jobs provide what New York
families need to get by. At Willets Point and Greenpoint-Williamsburg
developments where these provisions have already been set in motion,
hundreds of good jobs will be created for working New Yorkers.
Aside
from government action, companies, particularly those benefiting from
tax breaks, must raise pay in low-wage industries if we are to make an
immediate and wide-scale impact on poverty. Government programs alone
will fall short of the mark, and unions have shown they can work with
business responsibly to bring low-wage workers out of poverty.
In
New York, low-wage union workers make 16 percent more in wages than
their non-union counterparts and are 25 percent more likely to get
employer-paid health care and a pension. But joining a union can be
hard for many workers who fear employer retribution. Federal passage of
the Employee Free Choice Act,
a bipartisan bill which would create a more neutral environment for
workers to decide on union membership, would help low-wage workers join
a union and get the raises they need.
Americans have long held
to the notion that having a job means you can make ends meet. But
unless steps are taken to address the growing imbalance in our economy,
we could wake up one day in a city of just the very rich and the
working poor.
- Mike Fishman
Mike
Fishman is president of SEIU Local 32BJ, with more than 100,000
members, including 70,000 in New York City, making it the largest
private sector union on the East Coast.
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Employee Free Choice Act
collapse of the middle class
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