From Disability Scoop:
“Momentum Growing To End
Subminimum Wage”
With federal lawmakers slow to
act, cities and states are increasingly moving to bar employers from paying
workers with disabilities less than minimum wage. In the last few years, a
handful of states and cities have banned or restricted the practice, and
advocates say momentum is growing across the country. At least five states have
pending legislation that would abolish the so-called subminimum wage, according
to the National Association of State Directors of Developmental Disabilities
Services or NASDDDS. “I have seen the
issue raised more than once to eliminate subminimum wage, but it’s never gotten
to this level of action,” said Rie Kennedy-Lizotte, director of employment
policy for NASDDDS. Opponents of subminimum wage, which dates back to 1938 and
allows employers to pay workers with disabilities as little as pennies per
hour, say the practice is antiquated and exploitative. They say many people
with disabilities are already living in poverty but want the opportunity for
competitive, integrated employment. But
some families argue that sheltered workshops where subminimum wage is commonly
used provide a valuable way for adults with severe disabilities to build their
self-esteem and be productive. Such segregated programs, however, are
ineffective at transitioning employees into the general workforce, according to
the National Council on Disability. The recent movement by states began in 2015
when New Hampshire banned employers from paying subminimum wage, and Maryland
followed suit in 2016. Alaska’s Department of Labor ended the practice last
year, as did Seattle. The city of Reno,
Nev. implemented a ban this year for city contracts and in June the governor of
Texas signed legislation that will require state contractors to pay workers
with disabilities at least minimum wage. This month, a Washington state law
takes effect that prohibits state agencies from paying subminimum wage to
people with disabilities. States with pending legislation include Connecticut,
Illinois, Montana, New York and North Carolina. Shaun Bickley, who describes
himself as an autistic advocate and who led the campaign that ended subminimum
wage in Seattle, said state and local efforts will likely help drive federal
action by building critical mass. “We
have way more momentum on it than we’ve ever had in both states and the federal
level, and that’s increasing,” said Bickley, who works for a local nonprofit
disability rights group. “This is the result of years of organizing by disabled
activists.” Advocates say the changes are being driven by a variety of factors
including evolving expectations among people with disabilities, better
preparation and support for employment, and Medicaid’s shift to home and
community-based services that require integration in the community. Kennedy-Lizotte
of NASDDDS noted that 47 percent of people with disabilities surveyed by the
National Core Indicators, a collaboration that allows states to track outcome
measures for people with developmental disabilities, wanted community
employment. “We need to help people do what they’re asking for,” she said.
“Subminimum wage jobs just don’t make sense anymore.” At the federal level, two
different bills introduced earlier this year in both the U.S. House and the
Senate would eliminate subminimum wage within six years. However, neither the
Raise the Wage Act, H.R. 582, or the Transformation to Competitive Employment
Act, S. 260, have been brought to a vote. Bickley said for self-advocates who live in
states that haven’t taken action, or who want to influence the federal process,
allies already working on the issue can help. “Identify if you have people on
the city, state or federal level that you can meet with or talk to,” Bickley
said. “Having legalized discrimination doesn’t help us. We know this model
doesn’t work.”
^ The term “Minimum” in Minimum
Wage implies that there is a set (Federally and State) rate that everyone has
to be paid, but the disabled are one of the groups that is allowed to be
officially discriminated against and paid a subminimum wage because of their disabilities.
I really hope more States and the Federal Government end this overt
discrimination and make one Minimum Wage for everyone. ^
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