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Sun Chronicle (MA): Rally backs minimum wage hike

By Max Lewontin
Sun Chronicle (MA), March 27, 2014

BOSTON - Alternating between chants of "Sí se puede" and "When we fight, we win!" almost 200 people gathered in front of the Statehouse Wednesday in support of a proposal to raise the minimum wage and tie subsequent increases to the cost of living. ...

The issue has been hotly debated in both branches of the Legislature. The state Senate passed a bill in November to raise the minimum wage from $8 to $11 an hour by 2016 while linking it to increases in inflation.

A...

Business Administration Information: Business Leaders Hit Capitol Hill to Fight for Minimum Wage Increase

By Erin Palmer
Business Administration Information, March 27, 2014

Debates about increasing the minimum wage continue on Capitol Hill this week as dozens of business leaders are meeting with members of Congress on Wednesday and Thursday to gain support for a minimum wage increase to $10.10 an hour.

Business owners and executives from the Smart Capitalists for American Prosperity and Business for a Fair Minimum Wage groups are meeting with officials from the White House and other prominent politicians to rally for an increase of the current $7.25 an hour minimum wage.

The groups include...

CBS Money Watch: These business owners want a higher minimum wage

By Aimee Picchi
CBS Money Watch, March 26, 2014

In the battle over the minimum wage, low-wage workers are getting a helping hand from corporate America. Dozens of executives and business owners are meeting with members of Congress Wednesday and Thursday, urging them to support a proposed hike of the baseline wage to $10.10.

While raising the minimum wage has backing from President Obama and congressional Democrats, it's facing tough opposition from some corporate interests and conservatives. ... But others in the business world, including Costco (COST) president Craig Jelinek and Ben & Jerry's founders Ben...

Boston Globe: US Labor secretary focusing on income inequality (Roundtable w business owners)

By Megan Woolhouse and Frank Olito
Boston Globe, March 14, 2014

... “Too many people are working hard and falling further behind,” said [US Labor Secretary Thomas E.] Perez in an interview with Boston Globe editors and reporters this week.

Perez was in Boston Wednesday and Thursday as part of a national, campaign-style tour to promote Obama’s proposal to raise the federal minimum wage to $10.10 from $7.25 an hour. He met Thursday in Cambridge with [eight] small business owners who told him that they already pay more than minimum wage — up to $14 an hour —...

Boston Herald: Massachusetts minimum pay may be $10.50 by ’16

By Jordan Graham, Matt Stout
Boston Herald, March 14, 2014

A proposal unveiled by House Speaker Robert A. DeLeo yesterday to raise the minimum wage to $10.50 per hour by 2016 reignited a debate among business owners and leaders, with some saying government shouldn’t be setting the standard for employee pay.

“We don’t think it’s the role of government to push up the minimum wage,” said Chris Geehern, a spokesman for Associated Industries of Massachusetts, one of the state’s largest business groups. ...

But Paul Guzzi, Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce president, said DeLeo has...

Natural Foods Merchandiser: Natural retailer shares minimum wage hike support with U.S. labor secretary

By Christine Kapperman
Natural Foods Merchandizer, March 14, 2014

Paying a living wage is good business, says independent natural retailer Michael Kanter, who played host to U.S. Labor Secretary Thomas E. Perez and other Cambridge, Mass.-area businesspeople Thursday. Perez visited Cambridge Naturals as part of a two-day, Boston-area tour to advance President Obama's idea to raise the federal minimum wage from $7.25 to $10 an hour. ...

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Boston Globe: US Labor secretary urges higher minimum wage (meeting with business owners)

By Frank Olito
Boston Globe, March 13, 2014

CAMBRIDGE—US Secretary of Labor Thomas Perez on Thursday met with local business owners to further urge Congress to increase the federal minimum wage, arguing it would help companies attract and retain workers, and lead to greater productivity. ...

Perez spoke with [eight] local business owners who pay their workers more than minimum wages. They included the owners of Cambridge Naturals, Michael Kanter and Elizabeth Stagl, who pay their employees $11-$15 an hour.

In a roundtable discussion, the business owners told Perez that paying higher wages not only helps...

US DOL Newsletter: Small Business Owners Say Raise the Wage

US Department of Labor Newsletter, March 13, 2014

The referenced media source is missing and needs to be re-embedded.

... At health and wellness store Cambridge Naturals outside of Boston, on March 13, Secretary Perez attended a gathering of small business owners who are weighing in on the need to raise the wage, saying that more money in the hands of workers is good for their bottom lines and the economy as a whole. A higher entry-level wage reduces turnover and improves workers' attitudes and performance, which results in happier customers and better business, they told the secretary. "Every dollar we can invest in somebody comes...