Canadian Manufacturing

Group calls for workers to make living wage; CFIB says its ‘unrealistic’

by The Canadian Press   

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A report from advocacy group Living Wage Saskatoon calculates the living wage for Saskatoon to be about $30,000 per year

SASKATOON—A group in Saskatoon is calling on business owners to start paying employees a living wage rather than the government-mandated minimum wage.

A group called Living Wage Saskatoon authored a report calculating how much an average person needs to earn to live healthy and comfortably in Saskatoon.

Using an approach that’s been used in two dozen communities across Canada, the group calculated the living wage for Saskatoon to be $16.77 per hour for an individual working 35 hours per week.

That roughly equals a $30,000 annual salary, which the report says is what an employee actually needs to live in Saskatoon.

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That’s a 60 per cent increase to Saskatchewan’s $10.50 an hour minimum wage.

The Canadian Federation of Independent Business calls the recommendation unrealistic and unpractical.

“That would have devastating effects for a small business,” said CFIB spokeswoman Marilyn Braun-Pollon. “The result will be they’ll raise their prices, staff hours would be reduced, it’ll hurt the very people that this group is trying to help.”

She said what the Living Wage Saskatoon report fails to consider is that a majority of employers already offer competitive wages to attract and retain talented individuals.

The Living Wage Saskatoon project is an initiative by the Saskatoon Poverty Reduction Partnership, beside the United Way Saskatoon and Upstream. In its report the groups states that paying employees more up front will lead to a more profitable business in the long-run as employees will be happier, employers will see less sick days being used and they’ll save on costs associated with hiring and training.

While the report uses examples like Costco and Home Depot as businesses which have seen improvement to productivity as a result of paying employees a living wage, the CFIB says small businesses don’t have the resources of the multi-national companies to do that.

“This one-size fits all approach is unrealistic and unpractical and will lead to massive increase in labour costs for retailers and the hospitality sector,” Braun-Pollon said.

This story was filed by Saskatoon radio station CKOM

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