Maryland 1st State to Pass Living Wage
Wednesday, April 11, 2007
Maryland became the first state to require contractors to pay workers a living
wage Tuesday night, the fruit of a months-long coalition campaign that included
union members, religious leaders and civil rights advocates. On its last day in
session, the Maryland Senate voted, 31–16, to approve the measure, which was
passed by the state House last week. Gov. Martin O’Malley (D), who campaigned
for the legislation, has promised to sign the bill. The new law will require
service contractors doing business with the state to pay employees $11.30 an
hour in urban areas and $8.50 an hour in rural areas. The state’s minimum wage
is $6.15 an hour. The final vote is another step toward lifting thousands of
Maryland workers out of poverty, says Fred Mason, president of the Maryland
State and D.C. AFL-CIO. “This vote is important for all workers. The union
movement is the voice for all workers. We look out for workers, whether they are
union members or not. And we don’t think the state should ever have been in
the business of creating poverty-level jobs.” Maryland lawmakers passed a
living-wage bill in 2004, but it was vetoed by then-Gov. Robert Ehrlich (R).
-by James Parks, AFL-CIO
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