In a major win for the movement to boost wages for low-paid workers, Los Angeles voted Tuesday to raise its minimum wage to $15 an hour.
The nation’s second-largest city joins Seattle, San Francisco, and Oakland, among others, in going to the $15-per-hour level being demanded by an increasingly confident labor-backed low-wage worker campaign.
“People like me, who work hard for multibillion-dollar corporations like McDonald’s, should not have to rely on food stamps to survive,” said Albina Ardon, a McDonald’s worker from Los Angeles and a member of the Fight for 15 campaign, which is backed by the powerful Service Employees International Union. “My life would be completely different if I were paid $15 an hour. I could afford groceries without needing food stamps, my family could stop sharing our apartment with renters for extra money, and I’d be able to provide my daughters with some security.”
The raise, which was approved by a 14-1 vote of the city council, will be phased in over several years and will reach $15 for large businesses by 2020, and for smaller businesses and some non-profits a year later.
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A recent study by economists at the University of California, Berkeley, found that over 600,000 L.A. workers — over 40% of the city’s workforce — would benefit from raising the minimum wage to $15.25 per hour.








