When Birmingham, Alabama raised its minimum wage to $10.10 an hour last year, it offered a ray of hope to Antoin Adams.
A 23-year-old worker at Hardee’s, Adams struggles to get by on $7.25 an hour, the federal minimum.
“Life on $7.25 is impossible,” said Adams, adding that he often asks himself: “Do I have money for dinner, or should I just go without food in order to afford treatment for my chronic asthma?”
With the raise, Adams thought, he’d have an easier time staying afloat, and might one day even be able to think about going to college to become a computer technician.
That dream died in February. Just days before the Birmingham measure was set to go into effect, Alabama Republicans passed a law, known as HB 174, that barred cities from hiking their minimum wages. Just like that, Adams’s expected raise—and that of 40,000 other predominantly black low-wage workers in Birmingham—was canceled.
Now Adams is a plaintiff in a lawsuit filed Thursday in federal court that accuses Alabama of illegal racial discrimination in blocking Birmingham’s minimum wage increase. The suit claims HB 174 was a product of “racial animus” and that it violates the equal protection clause of the U.S. Constitution.
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“It’s the latest chapter in the long history of Alabama, where a white legislature overrides the will of minority communities,” said Richard Ruoco, a lawyer for the plaintiffs. “It was simply time to take a stand.”
Birmingham’s raise represented a rare victory in the South for the nationwide movement to boost pay for low-wage workers—many of whom are young minorities who toil in the fast-food industry. Elsewhere, the campaign has been far more successful: California and New York recently mandated a $15 an hour wage, to be phased in gradually over the next few years.
Alabama’s move to block Birmingham’s raise was part of a national trend. In recent years, mostly Republican-controlled states have passed laws that preempt progressive local legislation on a range of issues, from paid sick leave to regulating fracking—a strategy some activists call an assault on local democracy.









