The mayor of St. Louis wants to make his city the latest to raise its minimum wage to $15 an hour.
If successful, Mayor Francis Slay’s proposal would make St. Louis the first non-coastal city to hit the $15 mark—suggesting that the fight for $15 an hour is spreading beyond the liberal enclaves where it has so far had most success.
The initiative also underscores how the campaign for higher wages is gaining strength from ties to the Black Lives Matter movement, and from anger over the police shooting last summer of Michael Brown, an unarmed St. Louis-area teen.
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A draft bill would raise the city’s minimum wage to $15 per hour by 2020, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported. Companies with fewer than 16 employees or that do less than $500,000 in gross yearly sales.
“Any American who is working full time should be able to put a roof over their head and food in their stomach,” Alderman Shane Cohn, the bill’s sponsor, told msnbc.
So far, the only cities to go to $15 per hour are on the west coast: San Francisco; Seattle; and SeaTac, Washington. Los Angeles passed legislation last month to join them. Similar proposals are pending or planned for Washington, D.C.; Portland, Maine; Sacramento and Davis, California; and Takoma and Olympia, Washington. A wage board in New York is considering raising wages for the state’s fast-food workers.
Of course, four red states—Alaska, Nebraska, South Dakota, and Arkansas—passed voter initiatives last fall to raise their minimum wages, offering evidence that the cause of boosting wages for low-wage workers has appeal even in conservative areas. But none came close to requiring $15 per hour, which is what many workers in the fast-food and other low-wage industries say is the minimum they need to get by and in some cases support families.









