Dear Member of Congress,
Passing both the Paycheck Fairness Act and the Fair Minimum Wage Act will go a long way toward closing the wage gap, moving families out of poverty, and strengthening our national economy.
These issues are critical to our families’ economic security, and indeed the economic security of the nation, and as such they deserve to be treated as more than just political footballs. You need to support and prioritize passing BOTH the Paycheck Fairness Act and the Fair Minimum Wage Act.
Thank you!
Subject:
Urgent! Help close the moms' wage gap!
Your message to friends:
I just got this email from MomsRising about important the Paycheck Fairness Act and the Fair Minimum Wage Act are -- and I knew you'd want to take action too! CLICK below to tell your members of Congress to support equal pay AND raising the wage to help close the gender wage gap! http://action.momsrising.org/sign/LatinaEqualPayDay/?referring_akid=5830.2111745.gHJXc8&source=taf You can read more about it below. -Elyssa ========= Original Message =========== Dear Elyssa, Grrrrrr…. Last month the U.S. Census reported that the gender wage gap for Latinas is still jaw-droppingly huge. [1] In fact, Latinas are paid just 56 cents to every dollar paid to white men. [2] To put it another way: Latina’s have to work, on average, from January 1st of 2013 until October 8th of 2014 to earn what white men earned in 2013. [3] So this October 8th — Latina Equal Pay Day — let’s join together to send a very loud message to Congress: It’s past time to close the gender wage gap. BOTH the Fair Minimum Wage Act and the Paycheck Fairness Act must pass. http://action.momsrising.org/sign/LatinaEqualPayDay/?referring_akid=5830.2111745.gHJXc8&source=taf The gender wage gap hurts everyone: Unequal pay hurts our economy. This is because when women — who make three-quarters of purchasing decisions in our consumer-fueled nation — don't have funds to spend in our local communities, in our neighborhoods, and in stores, then our whole economy suffers. Latinas bear the biggest brunt of the gender wage gap. Median wages for Latinas in the United States are $30,209 per year, compared to median wages of $53,488 annually for white men — or a difference of $23,279 each year. [4] We need to close this gap. To be sure, raising the minimum wage will help. For instance, a $10.10 increase in the minimum wage would directly or indirectly raise the wages of 3.3 million Latina workers. [5] In fact, raising the tipped wage (as proposed in the Fair Minimum Wage Act) [6] is especially important to Latinas, who are overrepresented in tipped wage jobs such as servers and bussers. Tipped wage workers are nearly twice as likely to live in poverty as other workers. [7] Raising the minimum wage doesn’t just help close the gender wage gap, it also helps our entire economy as a whole. Studies show that raising the minimum wage would create 85,000 new jobs in the United States. [8] And the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago says a raise in the minimum wage would help our economy by increasing household spending nationwide by about $48 billion, even benefiting the Gross Domestic Product (GDP). [9] But raising the minimum wage alone won’t end wage discrimination. We also need policies like the Paycheck Fairness Act, because among other things, it would prohibit employers from retaliating against workers who discuss salaries with colleagues and requires employers to prove that pay differences exist for legitimate, job-related reasons. [10] *Take a moment right now to make sure your members of Congress know you want them to do everything in their power to pass the Fair Minimum Wage Act and the Paycheck Fairness Act! http://action.momsrising.org/sign/LatinaEqualPayDay/?referring_akid=5830.2111745.gHJXc8&source=taf Your voice is important. Let’s face it, opponents to the minimum wage are spending a lot of money trying to silence moms and low-wage workers so we need to be extra, extra, extra loud. We need as many people as possible to sign onto this letter via the link above so Congress knows that moms care about this issue. And also, after taking action, please make sure to forward this email to your friends and family — and/or copy the action link to your Facebook and Twitter page. http://action.momsrising.org/sign/LatinaEqualPayDay/?referring_akid=5830.2111745.gHJXc8&source=taf Together, our voices are powerful! -Ruth, Elyssa and the entire MomsRising.org team [1] National Partnership for Women & Families: America’s Women and the Wage Gap [2] ibid [3] U.S. Census Bureau. (2014). Current Population Survey, Annual Social and Economic (ASEC) Supplement: Table PINC-05: Work Experience in 2013 – People 15 Years Old and Over by Total Money Earnings in 2013, Age, Race, Hispanic Origin, and Sex. Retrieved 18 September 2014, from http://www.census.gov/hhes/www/cpstables/032014/perinc/pinc05_000.htm (Unpublished calculation based on the median earnings of all men and women who work full-time, year-round in 2013) [4] ibid [5] The Leadership Conference: Minimum Wage and Civil and Human Rights . [6] The Fair Minimum Wage Act (H.R. 1010 & S. 460) [7] Economic Policy Institute: Waiting for Change [8] Economic Policy Institute: Raising the Federal Minimum Wage to $10.10 Would Lift Wages for Millions and Provide a Modest Economic Boost [9] Cameron Davis. “Study: A Minimum Wage Hike Would Stimulate the Economy.” Think Progress, July 8, 2013 [10] The Paycheck Fairness Act (H.R. 377 and S. 2199)
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