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indago
07-31-2015, 02:48 PM
Journalist Gene Johnson wrote for The Associated Press 31 July 2015:
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Menu prices are up 21 percent and you don't have to tip at Ivar's Salmon House on Seattle's Lake Union after the restaurant decided to institute the city's $15-an-hour minimum wage two years ahead of schedule. It is staff, not diners, who feel the real difference, with wages as much as 60 percent higher than before. One waitress is saving for accounting classes and finding it easier to take weekend vacations, while another server is using the added pay to cover increased rent.

...For some of the restaurant's lesser paid workers - including bussers and dishwashers - that's meant as much as 60 percent more. Revenue has soared, supportive customers are leaving additional tips even though they don't need to, and servers and bartenders are on pace to increase their annual pay by thousands, with wages for a few of the best compensated approaching $80,000 a year. "It's been a surprise," Donegan said. "The customers seem to like it, the employees seem to like it, and it seems to be working...

...Brett Richards, a 50-year-old singer and guitarist, has worked 25 years in food service, including the past eight at Ivar's. Before, he made minimum wage, plus tips. Now, he gets $15 an hour, plus a share of the 21 percent menu price increase, plus any additional tips customers leave. He expects to make almost $7,000 more this year, money that's helping him with his increased rent and with taking his kids out to eat a little more often.

...The restaurant's revenue is up 20 percent, said Donegan, who served on the mayoral committee that drafted the minimum wage law.
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article (http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_MINIMUM_WAGE?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2015-07-31-02-24-51)

Gunny
07-31-2015, 03:16 PM
Journalist Gene Johnson wrote for The Associated Press 31 July 2015:
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Menu prices are up 21 percent and you don't have to tip at Ivar's Salmon House on Seattle's Lake Union after the restaurant decided to institute the city's $15-an-hour minimum wage two years ahead of schedule. It is staff, not diners, who feel the real difference, with wages as much as 60 percent higher than before. One waitress is saving for accounting classes and finding it easier to take weekend vacations, while another server is using the added pay to cover increased rent.

...For some of the restaurant's lesser paid workers - including bussers and dishwashers - that's meant as much as 60 percent more. Revenue has soared, supportive customers are leaving additional tips even though they don't need to, and servers and bartenders are on pace to increase their annual pay by thousands, with wages for a few of the best compensated approaching $80,000 a year. "It's been a surprise," Donegan said. "The customers seem to like it, the employees seem to like it, and it seems to be working...

...Brett Richards, a 50-year-old singer and guitarist, has worked 25 years in food service, including the past eight at Ivar's. Before, he made minimum wage, plus tips. Now, he gets $15 an hour, plus a share of the 21 percent menu price increase, plus any additional tips customers leave. He expects to make almost $7,000 more this year, money that's helping him with his increased rent and with taking his kids out to eat a little more often.

...The restaurant's revenue is up 20 percent, said Donegan, who served on the mayoral committee that drafted the minimum wage law.
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article (http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_MINIMUM_WAGE?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2015-07-31-02-24-51)

Long term effect --- unless wages go up across the board, you just turned millions of lower-middle class workers into indigent burger flippers and fry shakers. I sure as hell didn't get a 35% increase in MY wages. And I have skills beyond "May I take your order?".

crin63
07-31-2015, 06:28 PM
Personally I see the $15 minimum wage as a subsidy tax placed directly on the people. It's just another form of taxation. A way to take from the pocket of one person in order to give it to another.

Long term it necessarily has to increase the costs of everyday goods to offset the expense of business owners unless the business owner can afford to take the hit. Fuel costs will go up. Food costs will go up. Clothing costs will go up. Supply costs will go up. All of those items raising the overhead of business owners.