Minimum Wage Goes Up To $10.50 On June 1 In U.S. Virgin Islands
The territorys minimum wage is set to see its final phased increase to $10.50 per hour as part of a bill ratified by the 32nd Legislature and signed into law by Governor Kenneth Mapp. The three-step increase, which saw the hourly wages of Virgin Islands employees going from $7.25 to $8.35 in 2016, then from $8.35 to $ 9.50 on June 1, 2017, will increase to $10.50 on June 1 of this year.
According to Government House, during a recent cabinet meeting on St. Croix, Governor Kenneth Mapp instructed commissioners to raise the salaries of government workers in compliance with the minimum wage increase set for next month.
According to the Fair Labor Standards Act, state governments have the right to set a higher minimum wage than the current federal minimum wage rate. Roughly 29 states, including California, Florida, New York and New Jersey have enacted legislation increasing their states minimum wage. Studies have shown that increasing the minimum wage does not have a negative effect on small business, as some have claimed, and in fact contributes to an increase in the overall health of local economies.
The sponsor of the bill, Senator Jean Forde, had said that $7.25 was simply not enough to earn a decent living. This is a tremendous victory for working people, as the plain fact is that the minimum wage of $7.25 is simply not enough to live on, Mr. Forde said after the bill was signed into law. It is heartbreaking to see people going out and working hard every day, only to find that their paychecks cannot meet even their most basic needs.
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