Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr. published an Op/Ed in El Diario La Prensa this week, discussing the living wage bill in the City Council. It's in Spanish, so for your consideration, here is the English version.
To read the op-ed in the original Spanish, click here.
By Ruben Diaz Jr.
Bronx Borough President
Bronx Borough President
Diaz supports a living wage. |
On November 21, thousands of people from all over the City
crowded into the Riverside Church in upper Manhattan to make their
voices heard loud and clear: it is time for this administration to do
right by the people of this City and pass the “Fair Wages for New
Yorkers” Act.
What this bill asks for is very modest. When major economic
development projects solicit heavy taxpayer subsidies for their
projects work, they must pay their employees a “living wage,” currently
defined by federal law as $10 per hour with benefits or $11.50
without.
This is, by any measure, a modest sum. Yet our opponents
continue to describe this bill as the end of all business in New York
City, regardless of the utter lack of truth in their claims.
Jump below for the full piece.
What I saw from the podium at Riverside Church were the voices
of the masses, the underserved New Yorkers who have not been helped by
Mayor Bloomberg’s job creation and anti-poverty programs. What I saw
that night were thousands of people looking for a new way forward,
people who see in the “Fair Wages for New Yorkers” Act a small, but
meaningful, step out of the cycle of poverty.
What I see in our opposition is the face of the status quo.
When the “Fair Wages for New Yorkers” Act was first introduced, members
of the business community outlined their concerns with the bill.
Supporters of the bill, myself included, examined the most reasonable
concerns presented to us and adjusted the legislation accordingly. Our
bill will not hurt small businesses or affordable housing developments,
despite the misguided, misinformed and disingenuous claims of our
opposition.
Yet, despite our good faith effort to make reasonable
adjustments to the “Fair Wages for New Yorkers” Act, our opponents
continue to argue that a “living wage” is too much for our City. It has
become clear that many of our opponents will never support this bill,
no matter how many times it is adjusted to their liking.
Their opposition continues, despite the fact that other cities
that have “living wage” laws have seen no negative impact on business
development whatsoever. Expert testimony at the City Council, just one
day after our rally, showed that Los Angeles has seen no decrease in
business activity since it passed its own living wage law in 1999. Many
of the same arguments made against our bill were used then as they are
now, and without any data to prove that a “living wage” will hurt
business.
Opponents of a living wage were wrong then just like they,
and Mayor Bloomberg, are wrong now.
The rally at Riverside Church, where thousands stood within the
walls that once bore witness to Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., was a
historic occasion. It showed our opposition, who too often are
insulated from the real world, that the view of our economy from the
street is far different. It showed that much of this City is mobilized
to change the way we do business.
Our great mayor, Fiorello LaGuardia, once made it clear to the
people of this City: “No Doles for Millionaires.” It is time for a
return to that spirit, and for this administration to hear the voices
of thousands who came to Riverside Church—and the millions across the
City—and pass the “Fair Wages for New Yorkers” Act.
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