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Thursday
Jan062005
Thursday, January 6, 2005 at 06:24PM
Raising the minimum wage in the state of Maryland will be one of the
topics discussed at the special session of the General Assembly called
by Governor Robert L. Ehrlich Jr. this week. The special session's
primary issue is to tackle the medical malpractice liability insurance
bill the governor submitted last week. Earlier in the year, the
governor vetoed the living wage proposal (SB 621), which would have
raised pay for low-wage workers employed by state contractors to $10.50
per hour. The governor said the raise put too much of a strain on the
budget. An attempt to override this veto is expected, but Maryland's
largest small business advocacy organization has been working with its
members to keep the veto in place. "The living wage legislation is
horrible for business, period," said Ellen Valentino, state director of
the National Federation of Independent Business in Maryland.
"Statutorily setting high wages with no consideration for changing
economic times, geographic regions and the impact on start-up and new
business would be a huge mistake for Maryland to make." Tom Hucker,
executive director of Progressive Maryland, an organization in favor of
the override, says the bill is a sound, moderate solution to growing
poverty and welfare in the state. Despite robust economic and job
growth in the state, poverty is up for the third year in a row which
some attribute to low wages. "Financially," said Hucker, "it makes no
sense to pay multimillion dollar contracts to these corporations while
paying their employees food stamps because the jobs don't pay them
enough to feed their families." [more] and [more]