OPINION
We the people can make rules for our economy with I-1433
By MARILYN WATKINS
The occupations projected to have the most job openings in King County and statewide over the next five years include computer-related and business jobs that usually come with high pay and full benefit packages. But the top 10 list also includes positions in fast food, restaurants, retail sales, and office administration, where current wages are barely enough to support a single person, let alone a family, even outside the greater Seattle area.
Not everyone can or should end up a software engineer. We need people working in restaurants, groceries, childcare, health care, and social work, too. And those jobs should not trap tens of thousands of workers and their children in poverty and constant struggle.
By enacting paid sick days and a higher minimum wage, Seattle has started on the right path toward ensuring every job provides a pathway to opportunity and supports a thriving economy. But not every job is in Seattle. Statewide progress on these same policies has stalled year after year in our divided State Legislature.
For people now working at or near minimum wage in Renton, Southcenter Mall, or Yakima, that means an immediate pay increase of $250 a month, and an increase of $650 in monthly income by 2020. That money will get spent right in local communities. The initiative also means that a million people who don’t have sick leave now — many of them working in restaurants, retail, and other direct service occupations — will have the ability to stay home when sick or with a sick child without losing their paycheck.
We know from studying dozens of minimum wage increases and sick leave laws across the country that these policies succeed in boosting incomes for low-wage workers, decreasing employee turnover, and allowing businesses of all sizes to continue to prosper.
Over the past few decades across the U.S., wealth has piled up for the top 1%. The top 10% has also done pretty well, but incomes for most working people have stagnated or even fallen. Here in Washington between 2010 and 2014, during the so-called economic recovery, the annual wages for full-time workers in the middle of the earnings spectrum actually fell by 3% after inflation, according to the Census Bureau. Meanwhile, costs for childcare, college tuition, healthcare, and housing continue to escalate.
Growing economic inequality compounds racial and gender inequities and deepens divisions in our society and democracy. We all lose — with less innovation, economic vibrancy, and cultural richness — when so many are denied the opportunity to reach their full potential and pursue their dreams.
The initiative process also lets us act directly. I-1433 won’t reverse decades of economic policies that have driven growing income inequality, but it’s a step toward making our state economy work better for everyone.
We don’t have to wait until November to act. The Raise Up Washington campaign needs to collect 246,000 valid signatures from registered Washington voters by the beginning of July to qualify for the November ballot.
You can help right now by signing yourself, registering to vote if you haven’t already, and volunteering for the campaign.