The Rhode Island House Committee
on Labor heard three bills seeking to raise the minimum wage:
- H7770,
from Representative David Bennett (Democrat, District 20,
Warwick, Cranston), would increase the minimum hourly wage commencing
January 1, 2029, by an amount equal to the total percentage increase in
the Consumer Price Index for all Urban Consumers (CPI-U)
for the Northeast Region for the calendar year 2027;
- H7769,
from Representative Jenni Furtado (Democrat, District 64,
East Providence, Pawtucket) would set the minimum wage for 2027 at $20 per
hour; and,
- H7771,
from Representative Enrique Sanchez (Democrat, District
9, Providence), would set the minimum wage for 2027 at $24 per hour.
Here’s the video, edited to exclude bills and discussions
not related to the three minimum wage bills:
Proponents, including labor representatives, public health professionals, and economic justice advocates, argued that the current minimum wage was not a living wage, forcing full-time workers into poverty and creating health inequities. They contended that raising the wage would provide economic stability, stimulate local economies, and offer dignity to workers.
Opponents, primarily small-business coalitions and a
hospitality association represented by well-connected, high-priced lobbyists,
argued that significant wage increases would hinder small businesses already
facing high costs. They warned, without evidence, that raising the minimum wage
would lead to higher prices, inflation, and job losses, making Rhode Island
less economically competitive.
But the core of the opponents’ argument is that most
businesses in Rhode Island cannot survive if they are required to pay their
workers a wage sufficient to lift them out of poverty. In other words, an
“economically competitive” Rhode Island depends on the exploitation of
low-income workers.
Among the lobbyists present to make these arguments were:
- Jason
Martesian, representing the Rhode
Island Business Coalition;
- William
Walsh, representing the Northern Rhode Island Chamber of
Commerce, the Rhode
Island Builders Association, the Rhode Island Hospitality Association (RIHA),
the Rhode Island Marine Trade
Association (RIMTA), and the Construction Industries of Rhode Island;
- Robert
Goldberg, representing the Greater
Providence Chamber of Commerce; and,
- Ryan
Moot, manager of Government Affairs at RIHA, who doesn’t appear to be
registered as a lobbyist.
Some business owners, such as David Levesque of Brewed
Awakenings, also spoke in opposition:
“I don’t know how many of you guys actually sign the front
of a check, but I do. And many of the businesses that I work with also believe
in what I’m about to say: You guys are trying to push a minimum wage so we can
have a livable wage. Well, what is a livable wage? What’s it for you? What’s it
for you? It’s different for everybody.
“I can tell you, when my daughter started working for me a
year and a half ago, at 15 years old, she wasn’t worth $15 an hour. She had no
experience. She hadn’t worked before, but you required me to pay her $15 an
hour. So the worker that’s been with me longer, eight, nine, 10, or 20 years…
We can’t afford to pay more when we’re forced to pay an entry-level worker an
unacceptably high wage. There needs to be an entry-level wage.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Dave Levesque is the founder of the League of Rhode Island Business (LORIB), a statewide political action committee with 40 subsidiary PACs in every Rhode Island city and town, including Charlestown. Levesque is pro-MAGA and Trump, as well as bitterly opposed to gun control and taxes on the wealthy. His PAC seeks to unseat virtually every Democratic woman legislator in South County, as detailed HERE.





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