It's Long Past Time to
Raise the Minimum WageAll six states bordering PA have raised their minimum wages. Because of the higher minimum wage, low-wage worker in NY, NJ, and MD earn $3000 more per year than in PA. The last minimum wage increase in PA as in 2009, and it has remained the same for 14 years even as the cost of necessities has increased.
$15 by 2026: Raising the Wage in Pennsylvania
A higher minimum wage will lift family incomes, help working people afford necessities, restore local economies to health, and save tax dollars.
Who are the workers in Sen. Christine M. Tartaglione’s district (SD 2) who would benefit from a $15 minimum wage?
20%
of the workforce
24,000
workers
30%
are over age 40
only 8%
are 19 or younger
76%
are people of color
58%
are women
56%
work full time
40%
have at least some college education
32%
are parents
Senate Bill 12
Comprehensive Modernization of the Minimum Wage
Senator Christine Tartaglione has introduced legislation that will raise Pennsylvania’s minimum wage to $15/hour on January 1, 2024 and provide yearly cost of living-adjusted increases thereafter. Additionally, this legislation sets the tipped wage in Pennsylvania to 70% of the minimum wage.
Pennsylvania has not updated its minimum wage since 2006, and as a result, we still maintain the lowest allowable rate in the country. All surrounding states have increased their minimum wage rates, leaving us behind. In 2023, 18 states will increase their minimum wages for workers. 30 states, including many with a lower cost of living, have a higher minimum wage than Pennsylvania. Keeping people in poverty is not how we move the Commonwealth forward.
The current minimum wage of $7.25 is inadequate and, in the midst of inflationary pressure, it is immoral to continue with this baseline rate of pay. In 2022, 63,000 Pennsylvanians survived on the bare minimum and an additional 417,000 Pennsylvanians relied on hourly wages between $7.26 and $12. Vital members of our community, such as childcare, home health, retail, and hospitality workers, who work full-time while making the minimum wage only earn $15,080/year. These are some of the most fundamental jobs in our Commonwealth, yet the compensation for the hard work done by minimum and near-minimum wage earners is not sufficient to afford basic necessities such as rent, transportation, food, and prescriptions. Many are forced to rely on public assistance to get by. The inability of hard-working people to care for their own basic needs, or those of their families, is morally wrong and economically unsound.
My legislation will help raise citizens out of poverty, save state tax dollars as people are less reliant on public assistance, and reinvest a portion of the savings in state-supported childcare and subsidized homecare for seniors and people with disabilities.
Accordingly, my legislation also modernizes protections and enforcement standards in the law, by:
- Providing flexibility to municipalities to set a higher local wage under certain conditions;
- Guarding against wage theft by ensuring that the Department of Labor & Industry may recover wages and penalties for all violations of the act, not only when a complaint is filed;
- Increasing monetary penalties for violations, which in some cases have not been updated since 1968;
- Bringing enforcement in line with the Federal Fair Labor Standards Act by allowing workers to receive damages, in addition to unpaid wages; and
- Enshrining in law that gratuities are the sole property of the employee.
News & Video
Tartaglione Introduces Landmark $20/hr Living Wage Legislation
Philadelphia, PA − May 24, 2024 − Today, Senate Democratic Whip Christine M. Tartaglione announced the introduction of landmark minimum wage reform legislation to create a “Living Wage” of $20 per hour for all Pennsylvanians. Pennsylvania’s minimum wage has remained...
Senator Tartaglione’s Response to Governor Shapiro’s Budget Address
Harrisburg, PA − February 6, 2024 − Pennsylvania Senate Democratic Whip Christine Tartaglione released the following statement following Governor Shapiro’s budget address: “The Governor’s address today lays out a roadmap that moves our Commonwealth from being a...
Seventeen Years and Counting – Senate Democrats Continue to Fight to Raise PA’s Minimum Wage
Harrisburg, PA – July 7, 2023 − Sunday, July 9th, marks seventeen years since Pennsylvania lawmakers last raised the minimum wage. On July 9th, 2006, Governor Ed Rendell was joined by Senator Christine Tartaglione, Senator Vincent Hughes, and Senator Jay Costa, to...
Minimum Wage Rally and Reenactment
Hughes, Tartaglione Mark 15th Anniversary of Minimum Wage Bill with State’s Leaders
PHILADELPHIA, July 9, 2021 – On the 15th anniversary of the signing, state Sens. Vincent J. Hughes and Christine M. Tartaglione today marked the enactment of Pennsylvania’s last minimum wage legislation with a reenactment and rally with state leaders at the site of...
Senator Tartaglione, Congressman Boyle Detail Efforts to Raise Minimum Wage for PA and Nation
Philadelphia, PA – January 27, 2021 – Pennsylvania’s minimum wage workers haven’t received a substantial pay raise in more than 14 years. Today, State Senator Christine Tartaglione (D-Philadelphia) and U.S. Rep. Brendan Boyle (D-Pennsylvania) detailed their efforts to raise the minimum wage for the Commonwealth and for the nation as new legislative sessions commence in Harrisburg and Washington, D.C.
PA Senate Democrats Hold Hearing on Raising the Minimum Wage for PA in Honor of MLK Day of Service
Harrisburg – January 18, 2021 - At the request of State Senators Art Haywood (D-Montgomery/Philadelphia), Christine Tartaglione (D-Philadelphia), and John Kane (D- Chester/Delaware) the Pennsylvania Senate Democratic Policy Committee held a virtual public hearing on...