Congress has yet to act on Democrats’ proposal to raise the minimum wage, but one state isn’t waiting around.
Connecticut’s legislature voted on Wednesday to raise the state’s minimum wage from $8.25 per hour to $10.10. The federal minimum wage proposal endorsed by President Obama would also raise base pay up to $10.10.
Democrats have been talking about the need for a hike in the minimum wage for months, but the chances that such a proposal will make it through the Republican-controlled House of Representatives appear as slim as ever. Instead, the real movement has been coming from the state and local level. Connecticut is only the latest in a string of state legislatures and city councils to give low-wage workers the boost denied to them by the federal government.
Although Connecticut’s minimum wage is now the highest state-level minimum wage in the nation, some municipal governments have raised the wage floor even higher. The most dramatic example is SeaTac, Washington, where voters recently approved a referendum to raise the minimum wage up to $15 per hour. Last week, 87% of Chicago voters signed off on a non-binding proposal to match SeaTac’s minimum wage. Other cities considering a $15 wage include Seattle and San Francisco.
Advocates for a higher federal minimum wage hope that the wave of state and local legislation will light a fire under Congress.









