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Clarke optimistic about minimum wage bill

Supporters of raising Baltimore's minimum wage to $15 an hour during a 2016 City Council meeting.
P. Kenneth Burns
Supporters of raising Baltimore's minimum wage to $15 an hour during a 2016 City Council meeting.

WYPR's Kenneth Burns tells Nathan Sterner about Baltimore Councilwoman Mary Pat Clarke's new push to raise the city's minimum wage to $15 an hour.

Supporters of raising Baltimore's minimum wage to $15 an hour during a 2016 City Council meeting.
Credit P. Kenneth Burns
Supporters of raising Baltimore's minimum wage to $15 an hour during a 2016 City Council meeting.

Baltimore Councilwoman Mary Pat Clarke said Monday that the city is in a good position to raise the minimum wage to $15 in five years.

“We’re in about the best position we can be in,” Clarke said.  “Sure, we’re coming from a setback, but we’ve surged; we’ve grown [economically] as twice the rate of the state itself.”

State budget analysts said recently property wealth in Baltimore has outpaced the rest of the state.  The Baltimore Sun reports incomes in Baltimore have grown by 4.3 percent; a third more than across Maryland, according to analysts.

Clark introduced her proposal, similar to one that died last year, at Monday’s city council meeting. It would gradually raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2022.  It gives companies that have annual gross revenues of less than $400,000 or fewer than 50 employees until the end of 2026 to meet the new minimum wage.

The bill Clarke introduced last spring a bill would have raised the minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2021.  But it barely cleared a preliminary vote and was sent back to committee never to be seen again because it did not have enough votes to pass.

Copyright 2017 WYPR - 88.1 FM

Kenneth Burns is WYPR's Metro Reporter; covering issues that affect Baltimore City, Anne Arundel and Baltimore counties.
"If radio were a two-way visual medium," Nathan would see WYPR listeners every weekday between 5am and 3pm. Weekday mornings, Nathan serves up the latest Maryland news and weather (interspersed with the occasional snarky comment). Nathan also does continuity breaks through the midday, adds audio flaire to Sheilah Kast's "On The Record," infrequently fills in for Tom Hall on "Midday," does all sorts of fundraising stuff, AND "additional tasks where assigned". When not at WYPR, Nathan teaches a class on audio documentary at Towson University, and spends their spare time running around Baltimore's neighborhoods and hiking around Maryland's natural areas. Before coming toWYPR, Nathan spent 8 years at WAMU in Washington -- working every job from part-time receptionist to on-air host, gaining experience in promotions, fundraising, audience analysis, and program production. They've also served as a fundraising consultant, assisting dozens of public radio stations nationwide with on-air fundraisers. Originally from rural Pennsylvania, Nathan has called Charm City home since 2005.