British Columbia raises the minimum wage each year, but those raises aren’t closing the distance on the rising cost of living.
Living Wage BC is a program that calculates how much people need to make in a given community to afford basics like clothes, housing, food, internet and so on, based on a 35 hour work week.
If you don’t make a living wage, don’t worry, maybe you’ll strike oil in your backyard like The Beverly Hillbillies.
Here are the latest numbers from Living Wage BC:
- 25.95: Dollars an hour is the living wage in Kelowna.
- 25.10: Dollars an hour is the living wage in Penticton.
- 24.15: Dollars an hour is the living wage in Kamloops.
- 24.10: Dollars an hour is the living wage in Vernon.
- 17.85: Dollars an hour is the current minimum wage in B.C.
- 27.85: Dollars an hour is the living wage in Metro Vancouver, which is 31 per cent higher than it was in 2021.
- 22: Dollars an hour is the average wage in Kelowna, according to the job site ZipRecruiter.
- 32: Per cent of single, working age adults in B.C. who live alone or with a non-relative are in poverty. That’s the highest rate for any group.
- 28: Employers in Kelowna have a Living Wage Employer certification. That means they pay all their employees a living wage and applied to get the recognition.
- 24: Employers in Kamloops have a Living Wage Employer certification.
- 98: Per cent of living wage employers reported there was some benefit to paying everyone a living wage.