Measure
includes tax benefits, minimum wage increases as part of joint legislative
package to tackle cost of living in Hawaiʻi
Honolulu, Hawaiʻi –A House bill
that would benefit working families by providing tax benefits and increasing
the minimum wage was passed during a joint hearing of the House Committee on
Labor & Public Employment and the Committee on Finance today.package to tackle cost of living in Hawaiʻi
HB 2541
HD1,
titled Relating to Helping Working Families, would make the state earned income
tax credit refundable and permanent, and increase the refundable food/excise
tax credit. In addition, the bill would increase the minimum wage rate to
$11 per hour beginning on 1/1/2021, $12 per hour beginning on 1/1/2022, $12.50
per hour beginning on 1/1/2023, and $13 per hour beginning on 1/1/2024.
Finance Committee
Chair Sylvia Luke said this bill is an important part of the joint economic
package of bills introduced this session by the House and Senate and supported
by the Ige Administration to address Hawaiʻi's cost of living obstacles for
working class families and individuals.
"In this
package of bills which deals with affordable housing, child care and minimum
wage, what we are trying to do is take care of the working families," said
Representative Luke
Representative
Aaron Ling Johanson, Chair of the Labor & Public Employment Committee, said
this one bill is not meant to be the singular fix for all of the root causes of
Hawaiʻi's high cost of living.
"This is a
minimum wage increase; bottom line: under this proposed legislation, workers
are going to make more income. Additionally, the less talked about, but very
important feature of this particular legislation is the $70+ million in new tax
relief for all working families and individuals. The
legislation increases
wages and delivers assistance to the many workers and working class families
that need help now in a net beneficial way," said Representative Johanson.
The joint
House-Senate-Governor proposal is designed to preserve existing worker benefits
for the most economically vulnerable workers. It ensures that minimum
wage workers are less likely to have their employer paid for health care
premiums compromised if the employer reduces hours to compensate for a mandated
wage increase that they cannot afford. The proposal seeks to increase wages
without inadvertently reducing an employee's hours or present benefits.
The bill package tackles the issues
highlighted in the Aloha United Way sponsored report, "ALICE:
A Study of Financial Hardship in Hawaii." The ALICE (Asset
Limited, Income Constrained, Employed) report describes the economic hardships
facing many working individuals and families in Hawaiʻi. According to the
report, after allocating monies to pay for expenses such as housing, child
care, food, taxes, health care, and transportation, a family of four needs to
earn roughly $77,000 a year simply to survive.
The bill now moves
to the full House for second reading.
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