Current:Home > NewsCalifornia fast food workers to get $20 per hour if minimum wage bill passes -FinTechWorld
California fast food workers to get $20 per hour if minimum wage bill passes
View
Date:2025-04-15 14:45:26
An estimated 1 million fast food and healthcare workers in California are set to get a major raise after a deal was announced earlier this week between labor unions and industries.
Under the new bill, most of California's 500,000 fast food workers would be paid at least $20 per hour in 2024.
A separate bill will increase health care workers' salaries to at least $25 per hour over the next 10 years. The salary bump impacts about 455,000 workers who work at hospitals dialysis clinics and other facilities, but not doctors and nurses.
Other than Washington, DC, Washington state has the highest minimum wage of any state in the country at $15.74 per hour, followed by California at $15.50.
How much will pay change for fast food workers?
Assembly Bill 1228 would increase minimum wage to $20 per hour for workers at restaurants in the state that have at least 60 locations nationwide. The only exception applies to restaurants that make and sell their own bread, such as Panera Bread.
How much will pay change for health care workers?
Under the proposed bill, minimum wage salaries vary depending on the clinic: Salaries of employees at large health care facilities and dialysis clinics will have a minimum wage of $23 an hour next year. Their pay will gradually increase to $25 an hour by 2026. Workers employed at rural hospitals with high volumes of patients covered by Medicaid will be paid a minimum wage of $18 an hour next year, with a 3.5% increase each year until wages reach $25 an hour in 2033.
Wages for employees at community clinics will increase to $21 an hour next year and then bump up to $25 an hour in 2027. For workers at all other covered health care facilities, minimum wage will increase to $21 an hour next year before reaching $25 an hour by 2028.
Are the bills expected to pass?
The proposed bills must go through California's state legislature and then be signed into law by Gov. Gavin Newsom. The bills have already been endorsed by both labor unions and fast food and health care industry groups and are expected to pass this week.
The state assembly also voted to advance a proposal to give striking workers unemployment benefits — a policy change that could eventually benefit Hollywood actors and writers and Los Angeles-area hotel workers who have been on strike for much of this year.
A win for low-wage workers
Enrique Lopezlira, director of the University of California-Berkeley Labor Center’s Low Wage Work Program told AP News that in California, most fast food workers are over 18 and the main providers for their families. And a study from the University's Labor Center found that a little more than three-fourths of health care workers in California are women, and 76% are workers of color.
How does minimum wage compare by state?
Fifteen states have laws in place that make minimum wages equivalent to the federal minimum wage of $7.25 an hour, according to the Department of Labor. Another five states have no minimum wage laws.
Experts explain:With strike talk prevalent as UAW negotiates, here's what labor experts think.
See charts:Here's why the US labor movement is so popular but union membership is dwindling.
veryGood! (8518)
Related
- Grammy nominee Teddy Swims on love, growth and embracing change
- Stock market today: Asian shares sink as investors brace for Israeli invasion of Gaza
- Alex Rodriguez Shares Rare Insight into Romance With Girlfriend Jaclyn Cordeiro
- Lake Erie breaks world record for most waterspouts in a 24-hour period, researchers say
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- A hotel worker's 3-hour commute tells the story of LA's housing crisis and her strike
- French authorities say school where teacher was fatally stabbed last week evacuated over bomb alert
- College athletes are fighting to get a cut from the billions they generate in media rights deals
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- Turning the clock back on mortgage rates? New platform says it can
Ranking
- What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
- Russia waging major new offensive in eastern Ukraine, biggest since last winter
- With homelessness high, California tries an unorthodox solution: Tiny house villages
- The war between Israel and Hamas is testing the Republican Party’s isolationist shift
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- Israeli rabbis work around the clock -- even on the Sabbath -- to count the dead from Hamas attack
- Drug used in diabetes treatment Mounjaro helped dieters shed 60 pounds, study finds
- Ford Executive Chair Bill Ford gets involved in union contract talks during an uncommon presentation
Recommendation
Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
See JoJo Siwa Like Never Before in Intense Punching Match With Olympian Erin Jackson
Man, 71, charged with murder, hate crimes in stabbing death of 6-year-old
Child rights advocates ask why state left slain 5-year-old Kansas girl in a clearly unstable home
San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
Best Buy set to stop selling DVD and Blu-ray discs
CDC director Cohen, former Reps. Butterfield and Price to receive North Carolina Award next month
5 Israelis plead not guilty to charges of raping a British woman in a Cyprus hotel room