Hundreds of thousands of Arizonans are in line for a salary increase come January.
Arizona voters approved Proposition 206, which will raise the minimum wage to $10 next year and then gradually increase it to $12 by 2020, while also requiring some employers to provide three days of paid sick leave.
Preliminary results show it won on a margin of close to 3-to-2 in Tuesday’s election.
The business community mounted only token opposition to the measure, raising less than $40,000 for the campaign at last count.
Proponents, by contrast, collected close to $4.3 million.
Pro-206 campaign manager Bill Scheel has figured there are about 779,000 Arizonans now earning below $12 an hour, or about a quarter of the state workforce.
He also estimated about 934,000 Arizonans are in jobs where there is no paid sick leave.
People are also reading…
Proposition 206 is an outgrowth of a 2006 voter-approved law that established Arizona’s first-ever minimum wage, setting it at $6.75 an hour when the federal minimum was $5.15.
The 2006 law also requires annual inflation adjustments, which have pushed the minimum now to $8.05 an hour; it would have gone up another dime automatically in January.
The federal minimum wage is $7.25 an hour.
Explaining why the Arizona Chamber of Commerce didn’t mount a stronger campaign against the new measure, which it claims will result in job losses, spokesman Garrick Taylor said:
“Unfortunately, when these things get on the ballot across the country, they’re likely to pass.”