Ohio Republicans introduce bill to stop effort to increase minimum wage to $15
Advocates are gearing up to put a proposal on the November ballot to increase the minimum wage in Ohio to $15, which has led state Republicans to introduce their own wage-hike bill to “fend off” the constitutional amendment.
Ohioans have been debating minimum wage for years.
“I think everybody should at least get $15 an hour,” Akron resident Brandon Haverlick said.
It’s something Haverlick wishes could happen now. Currently, Ohio’s minimum wage is $10.45 for non-tipped workers and $5.25 for tipped.
Policy Matters Ohio economist Michael Shields said something needs to change — and it’s state law.
“It’s a measure that would both bring us closer to the cost of living in terms of the wage that everybody is taking home — and also make our labor market more fair,” Shields said.
He is part of the movement, trying to increase the minimum wage to $15 for both non-tipped and tipped workers.
While the group Raise the Wage is collecting signatures to get on the Nov. ballot, state Sen. Bill Blessing (R-Colerain Township) has introduced a new bill that he admits is an attempt to stop the constitutional amendment.
“I think it is a good faith effort by the General Assembly to say, ‘Okay, let’s meet the voters where they’re at, even if it’s something that wouldn’t have otherwise occurred,'” Blessing, a moderate Republican, said.
The idea for the bill was brought up in caucus, he said, saying he would take it on and look for a balance for each side. He shared that restaurant groups wrote the wage portion of the bill, but he is still trying to find a middle ground.
Senate Bill 256 would raise the minimum wage for non-tipped workers to $15 and tipped to $7.50 by 2028.
He thinks everyone, including tipped workers, would be better off choosing this over the amendment.
“Why would they want to support your legislation versus the one that would give them more money?” he was asked.
“That’s a great question — apparently there are a number of servers out there that make significantly more than the potential $15 minimum wage. They view it as ‘Well if you get rid of the tipped wage, even if you do it slowly, people won’t be inclined to tip,'” the lawmaker responded.
Akron resident Wil Cabrera understands this argument since servers can make more money in tips than just $15, he said.
“They make over $38 an hour, possibly, if they have a good day,” he said.
WEWS/OCJ spoke to numerous wait staff who do make more than $40 an hour — but those servers are the anomaly, according to Shields.
“Waiters and waitresses in Ohio make $13 and change at the median,” he said, citing his recent research into tipped labor. “Although tips do give folks earnings potential, right now, their employers are allowed to claim some of those tips as an offset.”
Mariah Ross, the campaign manager for Raise the Wage Ohio and One Fair Wage, said the Senate bill is just a “trick” meant to “confuse people.”
“At the end of the day, Ohioans are not fools,” Ross said. “They know what is happening in their state; they know what they’re currently experiencing and they know what is happening right now — pay is not sustainable.”
She explains that server tips do not decrease when servers get paid more, citing a study from Minnesota.
Some in the restaurant industry fear raising the minimum wage could change tipping culture and impact operations.
This article was originally published on News5Cleveland.com and is published in the Ohio Capital Journal under a content-sharing agreement. Unlike other OCJ articles, it is not available for free republication by other news outlets as it is owned by WEWS in Cleveland.