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Question of the day

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This has been a major bone of contention in the minimum wage debate this fall.

The state legislation also would no longer let employers pay 50 cents under the current minimum wage to people under 18.

Although theater and restaurant owners have complained of the added costs, Lightford said many youths supplement their parents’ income and should get the higher pay.

“Hard work should be valued, and they should be paid a decent wage,” Lightford said.

Setting aside the debate over whether the minimum wage should be increased at all, should employers be allowed to pay teenagers less than the minimum for adults? Explain.

posted by Rich Miller
Thursday, Nov 16, 06 @ 9:53 am

Comments

  1. Yes. Jobs for teenagers are their first steps into the working world. As such many are not worth the full minimum wage. Forcing companies to pay them $7.50 + COLA will cause them to hire fewer teenagers.

    Comment by Tom Thursday, Nov 16, 06 @ 9:58 am

  2. Same work, same pay regardless of age. On the top end of the age scale should retirees working part time to supplement their pensions get payed less because they have another source of income? I think not.

    Comment by Ali bin Hadden Thursday, Nov 16, 06 @ 9:59 am

  3. Even if you wanted to do this, how would you get around existing age discrimination laws?

    Comment by U of I Dem Thursday, Nov 16, 06 @ 10:03 am

  4. U of I Dem: The article stated “no longer” so the lower teenage wage must have passed constitutional muster as is.

    Doesn’t the Fed. minimum wage provide for a training wage? If there ever were an age discrimination issue this could provide an out.

    Comment by Tom Thursday, Nov 16, 06 @ 10:13 am

  5. I definitely think that a discrepancy is in order. You are overlooking a much higher turnover rate and thus a higher cost of training teenagers. The net result will be a downward trend in hiring kids.

    Comment by Anon Thursday, Nov 16, 06 @ 10:22 am

  6. I don’t think teens should have to work at all. I would vote for a candidate that would give the equivalent of 15 hours a week at minimum wage to EVERY teenager in high school. We need to make sure our teens are working on their education, not working to buy life’s neccessities. Also, we can’t let teenagers steal jobs from adults who need them to survive.

    Comment by C$ Thursday, Nov 16, 06 @ 10:30 am

  7. Rod is wanting to get this done before the Congress does after the Dems are sworn in…that way he can get credit…the 2010 campaign is underway…well, actually the 2002 one never stopped.

    Comment by tom Thursday, Nov 16, 06 @ 10:47 am

  8. The pay should be the same. If there is a difference, adults who need the income will be passed over for teenagers.

    Comment by doubtful Thursday, Nov 16, 06 @ 10:57 am

  9. We need to give teenagers a break. That means jobs, not pay. They need the experience and the opportunity to show their abilities. Without this provision, they will not be hired.

    Paying everyone the same wage is dumb.

    Comment by VanillaMan Thursday, Nov 16, 06 @ 10:58 am

  10. I don’t know – but I’d like to see any stats that Lightford might have.
    Keep in mind that many small, family owned restaurants in the city don’t have a very wide profit margin. An extra half-buck per hour per teenage employee could make a big difference between squeaking by and going under.

    I used to live in the city, and worked in Lightford’s district. I didn’t see many teens working in the restaurants, personally. Now that I’m in the western suburbs (where teens are earning disposable income at Applebee’s, not supplementing their parents at the local greasy spoon), I see them everywhere. So I wonder just how much of an issue this really is.

    But, giving Lightford the benefit of the doubt, her position is a bit odd to me. She’s among those who view the minimum wage through the prism of a so called “living wage” (ie, they should be the same). In light of that, is it right to pay someone who is the sole support of their family the same as someone who simply supplementing their families income? If we want to talk about paying people according to their needs (which is the philosophical underpinning of the “living wage” theory), then no, it doesn’t make sense to do that.

    I’d also like to hear her thoughts on proposals to mandate a higher minimum wage for big-box retailers. Was she for or against the idea of some of her Chicago constituents’ Hard work being valued less and making a smaller wage because they did not work in a store of a certain square footage? I don’t remember hearing anything from her about that, and in light of these questions, it fair to bring it up. Is she sincere in believing that wages should depend only on the value of the work being done, or is she just pandering?

    Comment by grand old partisan Thursday, Nov 16, 06 @ 11:24 am

  11. Whether the youth supplements the household income or not, one wage should be given for the work performed. Business should not be able to determine its workforce by being able to pay one demographic less due to any one discerning characteristic. It is just not the American way.

    Comment by Patrick Thursday, Nov 16, 06 @ 11:34 am

  12. Yes. On this case, let employers discriminate by age, a little.

    One objection to the minimum wage is that, as a way of helping “working families,” a lot of its benefits go to teenagers who are just entering the workforce and who frankly don’t need the cash as much. Making some small alteration to account for that reality strikes me as a fair move. If we raise the minimum wage, then teenagers will still be getting a boost.

    Comment by ZC Thursday, Nov 16, 06 @ 11:35 am

  13. Depends solely on the worth of the job at which the teen is working and the expected job turnover.

    Training time does factor in, even for burger flippers.

    Comment by Truthful James Thursday, Nov 16, 06 @ 11:45 am

  14. Ummmm no, teens should be paid the same as the adults, this is a clear cut equal protection violation.

    Comment by Crimefighter Thursday, Nov 16, 06 @ 12:51 pm

  15. Level pay across the board, minimum MEANS the minimum.

    I would make an exception for kids who are mowing lawns, shoveling walks, running lemonaide stands, paper routes, that sort of thing, we should stay out of their hair for that stuff. But for any legally registered, tax-paying, profit-taking adult-run business or proprietorship, everybody needs to be on the same page. My kids are not working for just the fun of it: they are putting the money away for college tuition, not ipods.

    The majority of even small fast food places and the like are paying more than minimum wage now, after the finite probationary/training period, so it’s not that big a sacrifice we’re asking. OTOH, I can definitely see greedy businesses exploiting youth or elderly employees with a below-minimum wage as a way to circumvent paying what everybody else has to, and pocketing the difference. Other ways they cheat like this already is by keeping the employment hours or seasons shorter, so as to evade rules for full-time workers. VoldeMart is a know practitioner of this in a big way, but MacDonald’s and those kinds of places do it too. For the really small businesses that sqwawk, there are already programs with DCEO and IDES that could be used to level out these hring costs thru tax incentives. That can be the safety net for the businesses that can prove they can’t make it any other way.

    Let’s teach our kids not only the value of honest work, but the values of honest and ethical business management while we’re at it, rewarding them for both. A fair wage does that too.

    Comment by Gregor Thursday, Nov 16, 06 @ 1:54 pm

  16. Kids should get used to get screwed by The Man and The Government every time they turn around.

    They might as well learn this way.

    But seriously, a lower training wage makes more sense. If employers are serious about not wanting a lot of turnover among kids, and the cost to re-train new kids, then that would be an incentive to keep them around for a while. But I’d suggest that is not really their concern.

    Comment by winco Thursday, Nov 16, 06 @ 2:13 pm

  17. If there is going to be a minimum wage set by the state… it should be simple. $6.50 for everyone sounds fine to me. Not $6.50 for me, $6 for you… or $7 in Chicagoland, $6.50 in the rest of the state. COLAs are crap when it comes to figuring the minimum wage because the cost of living in Chicago is more expensive than downstate. But I bet you would find that living in Galesburg and Peoria would offer substancial differences as well. Simplify and make it the same for everyone.

    Comment by Lovie's Leather Thursday, Nov 16, 06 @ 2:16 pm

  18. Forget the training and retraining you have to do with these kids. As a biz owner you have to teach them phone manners, good manners in general, proper English, how to spell, etc. The list goes on and on. Oh, and a big thanks goes out to our wonderful public schools!

    Comment by small biz owner Thursday, Nov 16, 06 @ 2:26 pm

  19. A few cents less an hour for youngsters seems fair to me. Forget the training and retraining you have to do with these kids. As a biz owner you have to teach them phone manners, good manners in general, proper English, how to spell, etc. The list goes on and on. So yes, based on all they have to be taught in the business place they should earn a few cents less. Oh, and a big thanks goes out to our wonderful public schools!

    Comment by small biz owner Thursday, Nov 16, 06 @ 2:28 pm

  20. Like we should pay like teenagers like way more like $20/hour because they need like way more stuff than like adults like need.Dude!

    Comment by BIG R.PH. Thursday, Nov 16, 06 @ 3:05 pm

  21. Let’s look at some numbers. SBA says Illinois has 255,000 “employer” firms and of those 96% have less than 100 employees. I have dealt daily with small business for over 20 years and the vast majority work hard, are not getting rich and treat employees fairly (like family in some cases).

    Each year thousands upon thousands of teens (like you and me I’ll bet) started our working days in a small business….at mimimum wage.

    Increasing the minimum wage to include all ages will, without a doubt, decrease employment opportunities for teens in the years to come. Small businesses work on slim margins and will not be able to afford to pay the higher wages along with all the added costs - workers comp, employment taxes.

    When I hear legislators compare small business owners to corporate fat cats such as the CEOs in big oil and large corporations I am stunned by their ignorance and/or their unflagging pandering to their base. I got doubts they know or could even read a P and L statement.

    Comment by smack-o-cratic Thursday, Nov 16, 06 @ 3:26 pm

  22. It is not a “training wage”. It is a youth wage and is very discriminatory. Under current law, a sixteen year old with 1 year of experience on a cash register in a grocery store can legally be paid 50 cents an hour less than an 18 year old with no experience. The elimination of the unfair youth wage will not inhibit youth employment — retailers will still hire 16 and 17 year olds because they know they will be moving on. The retail stores thrive on turnover.

    Comment by Grocery Guy Thursday, Nov 16, 06 @ 3:32 pm

  23. Grocery Guy, I appreciate your insight of the grocery industry. I think that industry is dominated by big business, not small. An increase of the minimum wage, especially to entry level teen employees, will cause a decrease of employment opportunities for teens and hurt small businesses.

    Comment by smack-o-cratic Thursday, Nov 16, 06 @ 3:54 pm

  24. Thank you Smack. Unfortunately, the big business retailers are the ones hurting small business owners. All across Illinois, it is the Wal-Mart’s, Target’s and other big boxes that get the huge public subsidies to put up new stores that eventually run the small business owners out. These subsidies that the small business owners can’t get place them in a more uncompetitive situation more than minimum wage increases.

    Comment by Grocery Guy Thursday, Nov 16, 06 @ 4:54 pm

  25. Our 16 year olds just going into the workforce often bring a lot of enthusiasm with them. They tend to run circles around the other employees and in the “hamburger flipping world”, you can watch the kids hustling around filling orders while their older counterparts watch. I’m absolutely for these kids getting equal pay.

    Comment by Little Egypt Thursday, Nov 16, 06 @ 6:07 pm

  26. A lower “training wage” or a wage based on “high turnover”? How about if I get one of those high-turnover jobs or need training, I’m in my 40’s, why wouldn’t those reasons pertain to me? Would you say that anyone that needs extra training should be paid less? Oh, we already do that and call it salary negotiation — you just don’t negotiate below minimum wage. I also think that wait staff should be paid minimum wage.

    Comment by NoGiftsPlease Thursday, Nov 16, 06 @ 7:03 pm

  27. NO: When an employer pays a person the minimum wage or, in this case below the minimum wage, they are saying to the employee, I would pay you less for your hard work that is making me money if it weren’t against the law.

    Comment by (618) Democrat Thursday, Nov 16, 06 @ 7:13 pm

  28. Although I am for equal pay, Little E, my experience with teenagers, particularly highshcool teenagers is not exactly what we would call productive. Many are inexperienced and don’t care. At the restaurant I worked at, the highschoolers did enough just to get by. They didn’t follow protocal and didn’t do their jobs well. The older crowd did much better for the reason that they depend on their jobs to live. The highschoolers don’t care and will just go find some other job where they can slack off. And if they don’t find a job, they have good ole mom and dad as a safety net. So I will go with age, experience, and dependability over youth anyday.

    Comment by Lovie's Leather Thursday, Nov 16, 06 @ 9:10 pm

  29. Lovie, I see your point. I guess not everyone was blessed with sons who have a high work ethic like little little egypt #1 and #2.

    Comment by Little Egypt Thursday, Nov 16, 06 @ 9:43 pm

  30. I have suggestion……

    If the legislature demands a higher minimum wage, annual cost of living increases with no training wage provisions AND also no under 18 reduction provision, then the law should also include a provision with equal importance to a ban on no call-no shows, no tardiness, no personal calls, they should also include mandatory drug tests…ANDE while were at it, they should also provide a requirement that ALL wages earned while training be immediatly returned to the business if a person quits their job once training is complete……

    Now back to reality…

    If an employee shows up on time, never misses a shift (as in a no call no shows) and works hard,
    I am willing to bet big money they will be paid far more than min. wage. This worker is valued asset worthy of far more than the min wage.

    However, sadly, this is not the case with nearly all min. wage workers that I have hired and fired over the years… If an employee is earning min. for more than the training period they should do some self reflection and not rely on a liberal legislature to raise their annual income.

    Before this law passes All members of the GA should be forced to put an ad in the local paper, interview and hire a perosn applying for a min. wage job, They legislators should then train the worker and schedule and rely on them for important task.

    If in six months months the legislators agree that the government should mandate higher wages for them then I support it…

    In the mean time, I suggest a better educational system and more vocational training…..

    Comment by Larry Mullholland Thursday, Nov 16, 06 @ 9:55 pm

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