Sunday, April 05, 2026
48.0°F

It's time to raise the minimum wage

Dave Fern | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 10 years, 3 months AGO
by Dave Fern
| December 23, 2015 10:00 PM

As a candidate for House District 5, Whitefish, I am in support of increasing the minimum wage to the level of $11 an hour subsequent to the next legislative session, one year from now. 

What is an appropriate minimum wage for a westernized and economic power house like the United Sates? In comparing 10 highly developed peer nations with established minimum wages ranging from a low of $5.76 in Spain to $15.58 in Australia, the median sum with inflation built in for 2016 equated to $11 an hour.

Some nations such as Denmark, Finland and until recently Germany paid varied amounts based upon occupational sector wide agreements between employers and trade unions, establishing industry wide standards — Finland and Denmark currently yield about $18 an hour and were not include in the 10 nation survey. In 2014 the German Bundestag adopted a national minimum wage at $11.28 an hour.

In a recent study from the University of Chicago, 42 of the nation’s most prominent economists were polled on whether increasing the minimum wage to a phased in $15 an hour would reduce employment of low wage workers. The study reveals that many of the participants in the survey are uncertain (38 percent) of the results followed by a slim margin agreeing with the demise of employment by a 26 percent to 24 percent margin.

I’ll place my confidence and subsequent bias with the German decision to endorse the minimum wage. This vibrant economy has been a global juggernaut.

Here in the Flathead Valley, many hard working people struggle to pay bills and make ends meet. While conservatives point to an increase in the Earned Income Credit as the alternative to an increased minimum wage, I believe both an increase in the credit and a more substantial minimum wage will boost incomes of those most in need. Hard working people like CNA’s who watch over our senior citizens, non-tipped fast food workers and box store workers, need that boost.

In the 2015 session two minimum wage bills were contemplated. HB386, by Rep. Mary Ann Dunwell (D - Helena) failed within committee. An attempt to blast the bill out of committee failed on a partisan vote of 59-41. The issue of the minimum wage clearly separates Republicans and Democrats with the former showing no inclination to raise the wage.

The lowest minimum wage in the world? This appears to belong to Bangladesh at 9 cents an hour.

Let’s vote in people willing to boost the wages of our most vulnerable members of the work force.

— Dave Fern is a Democrat candidate for Whitefish’s House District 5

ARTICLES BY DAVE FERN

June 10, 2018 2 a.m.

Democrats seek your vote for legislators

Whether your family has lived in Big Sky Country for decades or you’re a first-generation Montanan, all of us are united by the promise of our Montana values: hard work, rugged independence, and a commitment to join together and lift each other up in the face of adversity.

October 24, 2012 9:33 a.m.

Legislature is an opportunity to collaborate

Not long ago, we buried Joe Muzurek, a former Montana attorney general, legislator and statesman. As former Secretary of State and Montana legislator Bob Brown wrote in an eloquent editorial in the Great Falls Tribune, “Joe was the furthest thing from a phony or glad handler. His courage was in his integrity. It simply wasn’t his nature to take the low road. He was a straight arrow and the whole legislature knew it, and that is what gave him great influence in working out compromises and getting solutions the legislative process require.”

October 17, 2012 7:50 a.m.

Senate candidate lays out the issues

Not long ago, we buried Joe Mazurek, a former Montana attorney general, legislator and statesman. As former Secretary of State and Montana legislator Bob Brown wrote in an eloquent editorial in the Hungry Horse News, “Joe was the furthest thing from a phony or glad handler. His courage was in his integrity. It simply wasn’t his nature to take the low road. He was a straight arrow and the whole legislature knew it, and that is what gave him great influence in working out compromises and getting solutions the legislative process require.”