Report Title:

Minimum Wages; Annual Adjustment

Description:

Provides for an annual adjustment to the state minimum wage based upon federal cost of living allowance increases, beginning January 1, 2005.

HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

H.B. NO.

1881

TWENTY-SECOND LEGISLATURE, 2004

 

STATE OF HAWAII

 


 

A BILL FOR AN ACT

 

relating to minimum wages.

 

BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:

SECTION 1. The legislature finds that the minimum hourly wage paid to an employee should yield a basic "living wage" to a person working 2,080 hours per year at the rate of forty hours per week for fifty-two weeks. This reflects the spirit and the intent of the original minimum wage effected by the Federal Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938. The original minimum wage standard, which expressed this spirit and intent, was that the minimum hourly wage should be one-half the national average hourly wage paid to non-farm, non-supervisory employees.

A weakness of this nationally-based standard, is that in areas of the country, such as Hawaii, where the cost-of-living differential is substantial, the federal minimum wage falls far below the spirit and intent of a "living wage" minimum wage. For instance, in the 1994-1996 period, the cost of living differential for Hawaii from the national average was variously estimated by reputable sources to be between fifteen and twenty-five per cent. In fact, this differential is commonly referred to as the "paradise tax" and the "price of paradise."

Accordingly, the legislature has provided for a state minimum wage that is higher than the federal minimum hourly wage. Currently, for instance, the federal minimum wage amount is $5.15 per hour, while Hawaii's minimum wage amount is $6.25 per hour.

However, a problem has developed over the years, both at the federal level and here in Hawaii, with keeping the minimum wage current. Thus, the legislature determines that an effective remedy for keeping the state minimum wage current is to provide for an automatic annual cost of living adjustment. Raising the minimum wage in response to cost-of-living inflation helps all of Hawaii's employees keep up with the effects of price and rent escalation.

The legislature further finds that raising the minimum wage to a "living wage" rewards work, reduces poverty and its many negative social effects, enhances state revenue, and boosts the general economy of Hawaii.

The purpose of this Act is to provide for the adjustment of the state minimum wage beginning on January 1, 2005, to provide for cost of living adjustments.

SECTION 2. Section 387-2, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:

"§387-2 Minimum wages. (a) Except as provided in section 387-9 and [this section,] subsection (b), every employer shall pay to each employee employed by the employer wages at the rate of not less than[:

(1) $5.25 per hour beginning January 1, 1993;

(2) $5.75 per hour beginning January 1, 2002;

(3)] $6.25 per hour beginning January 1, 2003. Effective beginning January 1, 2005, and each January 1 thereafter, in order to accomplish a basic livable wage, the minimum hourly wage shall be adjusted for any cost of living inflation as follows:

(1) The federal cost of living allowance percentage as calculated by the federal Social Security Administration during the preceding calendar year for the region that includes Hawaii shall be added to one hundred per cent; and

(2) Multiplied by the State minimum wage of the preceding year;

in order to set the cost of living adjustment for the new annual minimum wage.

The annual adjustment to the state minimum wage shall be completed no later than October 15 of the preceding year for the following year by the director.

(b) The hourly wage of a tipped employee may be deemed to be increased on account of tips if the employee is paid not less than 25 cents below the applicable minimum wage by the employee's employer and the combined amount the employee receives from the employee's employer and in tips is at least 50 cents more than the applicable minimum wage."

SECTION 3. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.

SECTION 4. This Act shall take effect upon its approval.

INTRODUCED BY:

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