President Obama signed an executive order into action on Wednesday afternoon to raise the minimum wage for federal contract workers by 2015.
The declaration mandates all federally contracted employees earn at least $10.10 per hour — up from the current $7.25 — beginning next year on Jan. 1. It is unclear exactly how many individuals will be affected, but the increase could potentially involve hundreds of thousands of workers and Americans with disabilities. The payment hike won’t influence current contractors, though.
“I’m eager to work with Congress whenever I can find opportunity to expand opportunities to American families. But whenever I can act alone without Congress to use my pen to take executive action…that’s what I’m going to do,” Obama said during a press conference at the White House.
The president’s signature came one year after he first asked legislators to raise the federal minimum wage. While leaders in Washington took time to decide on their actions, six states passed individual laws increasing payment.
Obama said he has directed the U.S. Department of Treasury to create “MyRA” to assist workers with a retirement savings plan, rallied leaders of top technology companies for updated resources in classrooms, and brought together business leaders dedicated to hiring long-term unemployed citizens.
“No one that works full-time should have to live in poverty. Nobody, not here in America,” the president said.
Obama first announced this vow during his State of the Union address two weeks ago, continuing his focus to address economic inequality.









