Raise the Wage!
Kentuckians believe in a fair wage.
House Bill 1, sponsored by Speaker Greg Stumbo, and House Bill 191, sponsored by Representative Will Coursey, would incrementally raise the state’s minimum wage from $7.25 to $10.10 per hour by 2016, and the tipped-minimum wage from $2.13 to 70 percent of the full minimum wage. Lifting the minimum wage to $10.10 would raise wages for one in four Kentucky workers. It would also benefit 22 percent of the state’s children who have a parent that would be affected, or 228,000 kids.
The bills are now in the Senate State and Local Government Committee. When the two minimum wage bills came up for a committee vote earlier this session, KFTC members worked to deliver testimony that earned broader than expected support. Your voice matters!
Kentucky Jobs with Justice is having a call-in day today, so this is a great time to call your senator and the senators on the State and Local Government Committee with a message of support!
Please call the Legislative Message Line (1-800-372-7181) right now. Ask to leave the following message for your state representative and senator, and the Senate State and Local Government Committee.
“Please vote yes for HB 1 and HB 191, to raise the wage for Kentucky’s low-wage and tipped-wage workers!”
The Legislative Message Line is open from 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. Mondays through Thursdays, and until 6 p.m. on Fridays.
Learn more from a new brief from the Kentucky Center for Economic Policy, and take action today to raise the wage!
Recent News
Kentucky’s past legislative session showed alarming trend toward government secrecy
Churchill Downs takes more than it gives. That's why the Kentucky Derby is a no-go for me
‘We must never forget.’ Kentucky town installs markers for lynching victims.
Featured Posts
Protecting the Earth
TJC Rolling Out The Vote Tour – a KFTC Reflection Essay
KFTC Voter Empowerment Contractor Reflection Essay
Archives
- Home
- |
- Sitemap
- |
- Get Involved
- |
- Privacy Policy
- |
- Press
- |
- About
- |
- Bill Tracker
- |
- Contact
- |
- Links
- |
- RSS
Add new comment