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Hamilton’s living wage now $15.85 an hour

 

During an announcement at the Hamilton-Wentworth District School Board’s office on the mountain, the Living Wage Working Group unveiled the updated calculation at $15.85 per hour more than Ontario’s current minimum wage of $11.40 per hour.

More than 100 employers in Ontario have adopted a living wage policy to assist the province’s 1.8 million working poor.

 Hamilton’s revised living wage is on the lower scale of what 14 other Ontario municipalities have adopted over the years such as the Niagara Region at $17.47, Peterborough with $17.65, Toronto with $18.52 – the highest – and Halton Region at $17.05.

There are nearly 30,000 adults in Hamilton working full or part-time jobs but don’t earn enough to pay their bills each month, says Deirdre Pike, a social planner at the Social Planning and Research Council.

Read the full story at https://www.hamiltonnews.com/


Updated living wage calculation announced for Kingston

$16.58

Members of Living Wage Kingston and the Ontario Living Wage Network came together at Sisters of Providence of St. Vincent de Paul on Wednesday, Nov. 2 to announce the updated living wage calculation for Kingston as part of Living Wage Week. (LtoR) Jamie Swift, volunteer member of Living Wage Kingston, Greg deGroot-Maggetti, co-chair of the Ontario Living Wage Network, Cam Jay and Tara Kainer, co-chairs of Living Wage Kingston.
Read the full story at https://www.kingstonregion.com/

Announcing the 2017 living wage rate in Waterloo region

 

Living Wage Waterloo Region calculation is based on the National Living Wage framework using a reference household of a family of four with two parents each working full-time, full-year. This new calculation reflects a decrease of 63 cents from the 2016 amount of $16.05. Over the past year there has been an increase in household expenses mainly due to a rise in child care costs. However, this increase was offset by the expansion of the Canada Child Benefit implemented by the federal government in 2016.

Get the backgrounder here.


Encouraging St. Thomas and Elgin employers to buy into a living wage

Families shouldn't be scraping by with the bare minimum ... wage – at least if you ask the YWCA of St. Thomas-Elgin.

From Oct. 30 to Nov. 6, communities coast to coast will be marking National Living Wage Week – and once again the local agency is getting on board. 
“We're hoping the community is getting a good understanding and that 'living wage' is becoming common language,” said Lindsay Rice, director of community programming at the YWCA.

“We want folks to really understand the difference between minimum wage and a living wage.”

 

Read the full story at the St. Thomas Times Journal here.


Embracing the living wage

More than a blue-sky concept in Guelph, the practice of a living wage has been embraced by a number of local employers over the past year, including a national firm based here.

Next Tuesday, as part of Living Wage Week, those Guelph and Wellington “Living Wage Employers” will be recognized for their commitment to pay a living wage.

The Guelph and Wellington Task Force for Poverty Elimination started the recognition program one year ago.

In this area, that living wage has been determined to be $16.50 per hour, the conservative estimate calculated by the Poverty Task Force with the support of the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives.

 

Read the full story at Guelph Today.



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