What do you think the Washington State minimum wage should be?
Washington State's minimum wage may be the highest in the country, but $9 and change isn't enough.Nine and change isn't enough. Tell us what you think the state minimum wage should be -- and why
Read MoreEven the people writing the paychecks think that minimum wage should increase
Huffington Post: Minimum Wage Hike Has Strong Support Among Employers, Survey Finds
Poll after poll indicates that the vast majority of Americans believe the minimum wage isn't high enough. Apparently, a lot of U.S. employers agree
Read MoreCorporations are the biggest thieves around
Economic Policy Institute: Wage Theft is a Much Bigger Problem Than Other Forms of Theft—But Workers Remain Mostly Unprotected
“Wage theft—employers’ failure to pay workers money they are legally entitled to—affects far more people than more well-known and feared forms of theft such as bank robberies, convenience store robberies, street and highway robberies, and gas station robberies. ”
After a brief press conference to a group of TV cameras, we marched from the McDonald’s on Madison down to the I-90 lid. We gathered there hearing from workers who declared that I-90 will now be known as WA-$15. “I’m on strike because minimum wage isn’t enough,” Suzanne said. “I want $15 so that I can take my kids to Wild Waves. They’ve never been there; we can’t afford it. I always have to tell them no and I don’t want to do that anymore. It’s not right. They are making all this money and they pay us so little I can’t even treat my kids once in a while. This needs to change.”
“At the end of the day, we are all people.”
After a brief press conference to a group of TV cameras, we marched from the McDonald’s on Madison down to the I-90 lid. We gathered there hearing from workers who declared that I-90 will now be known as WA-$15. “I’m on strike because minimum wage isn’t enough,” Suzanne said. “It’s not right. They are making all this money and they pay us so little I can’t even treat my kids once in a while. This needs to change.”
Read MoreThe $15 movement keeps on spreading
The Olympian: Is Olympia ready to raise minimum wage?
“As cities including Seattle and SeaTac pursue a minimum wage of $15 an hour, Olympia City Councilman Jim Cooper wants the discussion to begin in South Sound.
Washington’s $9.32 minimum wage is the highest in the nation. The federal minimum wage is $7.32 an hour.”
SeaTac. Seattle. Bellevue. Washington.
Q13: Protesters demanding $15 minimum wage arrested in Bellevue after blocking intersection
“Dozens of demonstrators marched across the I-90 bridge from Seattle to Bellevue and, for the first time, rallied in front of fast-food restaurants on the Eastside.
“The grass-roots movement that happened in Seattle will catch on in Bellevue and hopefully infect all of the Northwest,” said Austin Welsch, a supporter of the group ‘Working Washington.’”
"Whatever it takes"
Malcolm works at McDonald's. He engaged in civil disobedience because he's willing to do whatever is takes to defend & expand $15.
We Are Rising
Seattle won $15 but the movement to strike poverty isn’t over yet. The International Franchise Association is suing to overturn our minimum wage law because they think it’s not fair to McDonald’s, and Tim Eyman wants more than $1 million to try and take away the power cities have to raise wages.
Read MoreThe sky is not falling
Washington Post: Raising the minimum wage without raising havoc
“As fast-food workers demonstrate nationwide for a $15 hourly wage, and congressional Republicans fight off a $10 federal minimum, little SeaTac has something to offer the debate. Its neighbor, Seattle, was the first big city to approve a $15 wage, this spring, but that doesn’t start phasing in until next year. SeaTac did it all at once. And, though there’s nothing definitive, this much is clear: The sky did not fall.”