ROTHENBURGER: Now is not the time to call for a freeze on minimum-wage hikes
KAMLOOPS — MINIMUM WAGE INCREASES are never popular with businesses. They insist that higher minimum wages make it tougher for them to make a profit and that wage increases end up being passed on to consumers.
Either that, they say, or they have to cut staff.
So with another hike in B.C.’s minimum wage scheduled for June 1, the business community is again sounding this all-too-familiar alarm. The raise would put the minimum wage at $14.60 per hour, up from $13.85.