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Culver signs into law a $7.25 minimum wage
Thursday, January 25, 2007
(Paid for by the Iowa Democratic Party)DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) -- Flanked by cheering
lawmakers and a couple low-wage workers, Gov.
Chet Culver signed into law on Thursday a
package raising the state's hourly minimum age
to $7.25 by Jan. 1.
"You have fought for
many years to see this day come," Culver said
during the ceremony at the Statehouse rotunda.
"I thank you for keeping the
faith."
Culver, signing his first bill
as Iowa's governor, cheered the broad
bipartisan support for the measure, noting that
119 out of 150 lawmakers voted for the increase
- including floor leaders of both
parties.
The state's minimum wage of
$5.15 an hour will increase to $6.20 on April 1
and $7.25 on Jan. 1.
Several interested
parties attended the ceremony, including Tonya
Gibson, who has worked at a series of minimum
wage jobs and is seeking her high school
equivalency at Des Moines Area Community
College.
"I'll be able to provide for my
children better and I'll be able to get things
that they need," said Gibson, a mother of five.
"I'll be able to pay rent, bills, buy
clothes, food and stuff like
that."
Culver said wages will increase
for nearly 260,000 Iowans who work at or near
the minimum wage - roughly 18 percent of the
state's work force.
The law does not
mandate wage increases for those who work near
the minimum wage, but Culver and others expect
the competitive market will boost those
wages.
"This is a real improvement in
the quality of life for many Iowans," said
Culver, who campaigned hard for an increase,
telling lawmakers he wanted the bill on his
desk in the first 100 days in office. Lawmakers
beat that deadline, with the minimum wage being
the first measure approved by the Legislature
this year.
It won overwhelming support,
clearing the House 79-19 on Tuesday and the
Senate 40-8 Wednesday night.
Culver,
speaking to those workers who will benefit from
the new law, said, "For a decade you have
waited patiently for a raise and today you will
get one."
After cheering the signature,
dozens of lawmakers - virtually all Democrats -
serenaded Culver with a chorus of "Happy
Birthday."
"This is quite a birthday
present," said Culver. "It is my 41st birthday
and I can't think of a better
gift."
Culver used 18 pens to sign the
measure, passing them out to lawmakers who
played a key role in the debate.
Culver
harkened back to his days as a teacher and
coach at a Des Moines high school, recalling
how a wage increase could have helped Iowans
back then.
"I saw firsthand how tough it
was for student and families working at the
minimum wage to make ends meet," Culver
said.
Congress is debating a measure
that would increase the federal minimum wage to
$7.25, but backers of Iowa's new law said the
state will enjoy higher wages a full year
earlier than what's being debated in
Congress.
Critics worry that the minimum
wage increase will hammer small businesses,
particularly in rural Iowa where wages tend to
be less than in urban centers. To deal with
that concern, the measure Culver signed exempts
businesses with gross revenues of $300,000 a
year or less.
The new law also boosts
the training wage that businesses are allowed
to pay new workers for a brief period, taking
that $4.25 an hour rate to $6.35 by Jan.
1.
A proposal to allow the wage to
automatically increase with inflation was not
included in the final version lawmakers
approved.
But workers such as Gibson
didn't appear dismayed at the ceremony.
"I remember when I was getting paid
$3.25 an hour, and then it went to $4.75," said
Gibson. "I can't wait until it's $7.25 next
year."
