B.C.’s minimum wage will be highest in Canada

Workers in British Columbia are about to see the highest minimum wages in the country.

As of tomorrow, June 1, the province is boosting the minimum wage from $14.60 an hour to $15.20 an hour.

In addition to boosting the minimum wage, the liquor server minimum wage of $13.95 an hour is being eliminated and replaced with the general minimum wage of $15.20 an hour.

Over the past four years, B.C.’s general minimum wage has increased from $11.35 to $15.20 per hour, benefitting close to 400,000 B.C. employees, the majority of whom are women, immigrants and youth, a press release issued by the Ministry of Labour said today, May 31.

“In 2017, our government made a commitment to increase the minimum wage to $15 an hour by June, 2021, through regular, measured and predictable increases. As of tomorrow, we will have achieved and surpassed that goal,” B.C. Minister of Labour Harry Bains said.

Tomorrow’s minimum wage increase means British Columbia has gone from one of the lowest minimum wages in the country to the highest in the past four years.

Starting next year, increases in the minimum wage will be tied to inflation.

In 2020, 12 per cent of B.C. employees made less than $15.20 per hour.

Other increases include a more than $5-per-day boost in the minimum daily salary for a live-in camp leader, while the minimum monthly wage for a resident caretaker climbs to $912.28 plus $36.56 per suite for managers handling nine to 60 residential units. The minimum monthly salary for a resident caretaker responsible for more than 61 suites increases to $3,107.42 on June 1.

Rosario Agustin, a janitor in Vancouver, says the increases since 2017 have been important because the cost of living across the Lower Mainland is so high.

"I have worked at a skyscraper downtown for over 15 years, and most of that time I was making minimum wage and supporting my family as a single mom," Agustin says in the statement.

"The minimum going up helps raise the bar for all of us."

— With files from The Canadian Press


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Steve Arstad

I have been looking for news in the South Okanagan - SImilkameen for 20 years, having turned a part time lifelong interest into a full time profession. After five years publishing a local newsletter, several years working as a correspondent / stringer for several local newspapers and seven years as editor of a Similkameen weekly newspaper, I joined iNFOnews.ca in 2014. My goal in the news industry has always been to deliver accurate and interesting articles about local people and places. My interest in the profession is life long - from my earliest memories of grade school, I have enjoyed writing.
As an airborne geophysical surveyor I travelled extensively around the globe, conducting helicopter borne mineral surveys.
I also spent several years at an Okanagan Falls based lumber mill, producing glued-wood laminated products.
As a member of the Kaleden community, I have been involved in the Kaleden Volunteer Fire Department for 22 years, and also serve as a trustee on the Kaleden Irrigation District board.
I am currently married to my wife Judy, of 26 years. We are empty-nesters who enjoy living in Kaleden with our Welsh Terrier, Angus, and cat, Tibbs.
Our two daughters, Meagan and Hayley, reside in Richmond and Victoria, respectively.

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