Minimum wage set to drop in Missouri

Authored by msn.com and submitted by Southjerseyboy

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ST. LOUIS -- Cities all over the United States have been boosting their minimum wage. It's up to $15 an hour in Seattle, but it's going in the opposite direction in St. Louis, Missouri.

Amer Hawatmeh's family-owned restaurant in downtown St. Louis is struggling.

Along with rising sales taxes, and meat prices, a minimum wage hike to $10 an hour two months ago made it expensive to stay open. So he's cut back from five to two days a week for lunch. His hamburgers are smaller, his entrees pricier and his customers scarcer.

Hawatmeh believes it's not the government, but a combination of worker determination and customer demand that should set the correct wage.

"That's how I built myself," he said. "That's how I'm teaching my children to build themselves. Don't ask what do I get, ask what can I do."

And Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens agrees. Next month, the minimum wage will return to $7.70 an hour -- ten bucks an hour was a mistake, he says.

"Despite what you hear from liberals, it will take money out of people's pockets," Greitens said.

Cities all over the country have been boosting their minimum wage. It's up to $15 an hour in Seattle, but it's going in the opposite direction in St. Louis.

But after nationwide protests, the minimum wage went up on July 1, or will go up soon -- from Chicago to Flagstaff, Arizona, and Los Angeles to Washington, D.C.

Wanda Roberts, a minimum wage worker in St. Louis, said the new $10 wage brought in an extra $400 a month and helped the local economy.

"If we're making $10 an hour, we're going to go right back out and spend that money," Roberts said.

And now that it's being reversed, she says she would "go back to struggling."

"Trying to worry about how I'm going to pay my rent, how I'm going to pay my bills and how I'm going to have money left over to buy household supplies and food," she added. In St. Louis, the minimum wage was going to increase to $11 an hour in January. Now, that won't happen. And by one estimate, 38,000 workers could miss out on a raise.

mosura1 on July 6th, 2017 at 15:13 UTC »

The beers at a Blues game will cost more than the hourly wage of the person serving them.

woowoo293 on July 6th, 2017 at 14:52 UTC »

The same restaurant owner profiled here also complained a few years ago that competition from the ballpark was wrecking his business.

https://www.riverfronttimes.com/foodblog/2014/11/05/downtown-bar-owners-say-ballpark-village-is-cannibalizing-their-profits

Edit:

Edit 2: deleted edit 1 because wtf was I thinking people like being told what to do or not do.

PragmaticParadox on July 6th, 2017 at 14:44 UTC »

Uninformative article is uninformative.

Here's an article that actually describes what's going on

TLDR: * There was a 2015 ordinance that raised it to $10 * After a 2 year court battle, the wages went to $10 last month * The state tried to address it in a bill in march but it went to the floor too late * The bill just went through and will kill the hike starting next month