Here is an interesting development concerning the sub-minimum wage issue (see my previous post). Six states enacted measures last year to raise the minimum wage. Two of the six – Ohio and Missouri – included exemptions for workers with disabilities from the minimum wage provisions. The other four – Arizona, Nevada, Colorado and Montana – did not include in their laws any language that would exempt such employees from their new state minimum wage.
Now Arizona Attorney General Terry Goddard has issued an opinion stating that workers with developmental disabilities are not exempt from that state’s new minimum wage that voters approved last November in Proposition 202. The new minimum wage of $6.75 an hour took effect Jan. 1.
Goddard concluded that the “special” minimum wage authorized by the federal Fair Labor Standards Act for workers with disabilities was not incorporated into the language of Proposition 202. Employers in the state previously were allowed to pay a lower minimum wage to individuals with disabilities commensurate with their productivity.
This issue will probably be a battle now. I am on the side of the law as it now stands. Minimum wage should be for everyone – and for those individuals with disabilities who need support for their productivity, let us use what we now know through supported employment to customize their job and their support. We should not solve hiring and productivity problems on the backs of those who can least afford it.
A copy of the opinion can be accessed at http://www.azag.gov/opinions/2007/I07-002.pdf
Martha Gabehart
So what is the status now? I’m with the National Association of Governors’ Committee on People with Disabilities and our counterpart in Wisconsin has had elimination of subminimum wage for people with disabilities as his mission for years. I’m doing some research on what the status is now and opinions on both sides of the argument. National Council on Disability will be in Kansas City in a couple of months and I am thinking of giving public comments to encourage them to continue to recommend elimination of subminimum wage as they did in 2001 in their recommendations on employment of people with psychiatric disabilities. So talk to me about what we would call it if a person could not produce up to a capacity that would warrant higher wages? Is it OK to stop calling it work?