Months after it failed to force Walmart and other big-box retailers to pay premium starting wages, the DC Council plans to implement a citywide minimum wage hike to $11.50 an hour, a raise of more than $3 that would give the District one of the highest minimum wages in the country.
Council member Vincent Orange said yesterday he will combine four competing bills into a final version he plans to introduce next Monday, with votes scheduled for as soon as mid-December.
The District’s current minimum wage is $8.25 an hour, just a dollar more than the federal standard. Recently, though, DC lawmakers and their counterparts in Montgomery and Prince George’s counties have discussed creating a multi-jurisdictional standard, agreeing on $11.50 an hour.
Orange’s bill would bring DC’s minimum wage up to $11.50 in three increments, increasing $1.25 to $9.50 next July 1 and by one dollar a year over the following two years, reaching $11.50 by July 1, 2016. That would give DC a minimum wage higher than any state and all but a few cities. San Francisco’s is currently set at $10.76 per hour and rises with inflation. Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn recently proposed raising his city’s minimum wage to $15 an hour.
Some activists would like to see the DC Council push the minimum wage to $12.50, the same rate that would have been implemented under the Large Retailer Accountability Act, a bill earlier this year aimed at getting Walmart—which is opening its first DC stores on December 4—to pay a much higher starting wage. A group called DC Working Families, made up of many of the same people who pushed for the large retailer bill, is demonstrating outside the Wilson Building today in support of putting a $12.50 minimum wage on the District’s 2014 ballot.
“The nation’s capital should not also be the capital of inequality,” the group’s director, Delvone Michaels, said. “To reverse this trend requires bold measures to raise wages as a first step in creating an economy that works for all of us.”
Benjamin Freed joined Washingtonian in August 2013 and covers politics, business, and media. He was previously the editor of DCist and has also written for Washington City Paper, the New York Times, the New Republic, Slate, and BuzzFeed. He lives in Adams Morgan.
DC Council Moves to Raise Minimum Wage to $11.50 an Hour
Under a new bill, DC would have one of the highest minimum wages in the country, though some would like to see it go even higher.
Months after it failed to force Walmart and other big-box retailers to pay premium starting wages, the DC Council plans to implement a citywide minimum wage hike to $11.50 an hour, a raise of more than $3 that would give the District one of the highest minimum wages in the country.
Council member Vincent Orange said yesterday he will combine four competing bills into a final version he plans to introduce next Monday, with votes scheduled for as soon as mid-December.
The District’s current minimum wage is $8.25 an hour, just a dollar more than the federal standard. Recently, though, DC lawmakers and their counterparts in Montgomery and Prince George’s counties have discussed creating a multi-jurisdictional standard, agreeing on $11.50 an hour.
Orange’s bill would bring DC’s minimum wage up to $11.50 in three increments, increasing $1.25 to $9.50 next July 1 and by one dollar a year over the following two years, reaching $11.50 by July 1, 2016. That would give DC a minimum wage higher than any state and all but a few cities. San Francisco’s is currently set at $10.76 per hour and rises with inflation. Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn recently proposed raising his city’s minimum wage to $15 an hour.
Some activists would like to see the DC Council push the minimum wage to $12.50, the same rate that would have been implemented under the Large Retailer Accountability Act, a bill earlier this year aimed at getting Walmart—which is opening its first DC stores on December 4—to pay a much higher starting wage. A group called DC Working Families, made up of many of the same people who pushed for the large retailer bill, is demonstrating outside the Wilson Building today in support of putting a $12.50 minimum wage on the District’s 2014 ballot.
“The nation’s capital should not also be the capital of inequality,” the group’s director, Delvone Michaels, said. “To reverse this trend requires bold measures to raise wages as a first step in creating an economy that works for all of us.”
Benjamin Freed joined Washingtonian in August 2013 and covers politics, business, and media. He was previously the editor of DCist and has also written for Washington City Paper, the New York Times, the New Republic, Slate, and BuzzFeed. He lives in Adams Morgan.
Most Popular in News & Politics
The Missing Men of Mount Pleasant
Another Mysterious Anti-Trump Statue Has Appeared on the National Mall
Muriel Bowser Defends Her BLM Plaza Decision and Looks Back on a Decade as Mayor
Yet Another Anti-Trump Statue Has Shown Up on the National Mall
8 Takeaways From Usha Vance’s Interview With Meghan McCain
Washingtonian Magazine
July Issue: The "Best Of" Issue
View IssueSubscribe
Follow Us on Social
Follow Us on Social
Related
How Would a New DC Stadium Compare to the Last One?
The Culture of Lacrosse Is More Complex Than People Think
Did Television Begin in Dupont Circle?
Kings Dominion’s Wild New Coaster Takes Flight in Virginia
More from News & Politics
Guest List: 5 People We’d Love to Hang Out With This July
The Washington Nationals Just Fired the Manager and GM Who Led Them to a Championship. Why Has the Team Been so Bad Since?
FBI Building Now on Track to Leave DC After All, Whistleblower Leaks Texts Suggesting Justice Department Planned to Blow Off Federal Court Orders, and NPS Cuts Leave Assateague Island Without Lifeguards
Families of DC Air Disaster Victims Criticize Army’s Response, Trump Settles His Scores Via Tariff, and Police Dog Kicked at Dulles Returns to Work
This DC-Area Lawyer Wants More Americans Betting on Elections
Trump Threatens DC Takeover, Says He’d Run the City “So Good”; Supreme Court OKs Mass Federal Worker Layoffs; and You Should Go Pick Some Sunflowers
Trump Pledges Support for RFK Stadium Plan, Ben’s Chili Bowl Will Strand Us Half-Smokeless for Months, and Pediatricians Are Suing RFK Jr.
Muriel Bowser Defends Her BLM Plaza Decision and Looks Back on a Decade as Mayor