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Should
Los Angeles Pass A Living Wage Ordinance?
Yes: It Makes Ethical
and Economic Sense
Los Angeles Times - December
30, 1996
By Frederick H. Borsch and Leonard I. Beerman and Roy I. Sano
"You shall not withhold the wages of the poor and needy laborer."
Those words, written centuries ago in Deuteronomy, are being taken to
heart here as the Los Angeles City Council considers a "living wage"
ordinance.
The living
wage being discussed is enough to bring a family of four up to the federal
poverty level--$ 7.50 an hour plus health coverage and other benefits
or $ 9.50 an hour without those benefits. The ordinance would apply to
those companies holding service contracts with or receiving subsidies
from the city. Some have attacked the ordinance as unrealistic and unaffordable,
but two recent studies show that it can be implemented with little impact
on the city budget, no employment loss and no loss of city services. This
is good news. But as a moral people we need to examine values, not only
costs.
How much
do we value the people who work in our city? What are their lives worth?
Let's make it personal. Let's think about a father of two who makes his
living as a janitor cleaning a Los Angeles landmark, the Central Library.
His employer is the company that holds the maintenance contract.
The janitor
now works six days a week and makes $ 4.75 an hour, taking home approximately
$ 700 a month in a county where the average monthly rent for a two-bedroom
apartment is $ 855. His wife has diabetes, but his job does not have medical
benefits. That is also why he did not seek medical attention when he hurt
his back a few months ago. It's everything he can do to pay the $ 115
monthly bill for the family's medications.
In another
case, Elvira (not her real name) works in a meat-packing plant that received
a low-interest $ 4.6-million loan through the city to move to Los Angeles.
She supports herself and her 5-year-old daughter on $ 4.75 an hour, or
$ 9,880 a year. The plant is cold, but she is expected to pay for jackets
and gloves out of her earnings.
City contracts
are certainly sufficiently lucrative to pay a living wage. The company
that contracts to clean the Central Library nets an estimated annual profit
of more than 36% (based on an analysis of their contract and interviews
with knowledgeable people in the offices of the city's chief legislative
analyst and General Services Department).
We have
the right and responsibility to see that such employees are paid enough
to support themselves and their families in basic dignity. We have a right
and a responsibility to say to businesses: If you want to benefit from
our tax dollars, then we can require that all who do the labor are paid
at least a living wage.
A fair and
living wage not only makes ethical sense, it also makes good economic
sense. People who can feed and care for their families and provide for
their medical care are no longer dependent on the social services that
taxpayers must otherwise provide. Indeed, when we think about it, why
should we allow companies that benefit from our tax dollars to pay their
workers less than a living wage and then leave the rest of us to pay for
health care and food stamps?
A healthy
society--less poverty, less crime, more people with a stake in the community--is
what will most help businesses in Los Angeles. By not withholding the
wages of the poor and needy laborer, we are all better off as a people.
Frederick
H. Borsch is bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Los, Angeles, Rabbi Leonard
I. Beerman is founding rabbi of the Leo Baeck, Temple and Roy I. Sano
is bishop of the United Methodist Church.
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