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Trump announces 'complete blockade' of sanctioned oil tankers to Venezuela; CA's Prop 36 turns one: More in prison, few complete treatment; Caps on nursing education funding threaten TN health-care workforce; OR farmworkers union calls for day of action against ICE tactics.

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House Republicans leaders won't allow a vote on extending healthcare subsidies. The White House defends strikes on alleged drug trafficking boats and escalates the conflict with Venezuela and interfaith groups press for an end to lethal injection.

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States are waiting to hear how much money they'll get from the Rural Health Transformation Program, the DHS is incentivizing local law enforcement to join the federal immigration crackdown and Texas is creating its own Appalachian Trail.

Who Needs a Raise?

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Wednesday, May 6, 2015   

COLUMBUS, Ohio - Momentum is building to raise the federal minimum wage, and a new analysis shows that working women in Ohio and other states would benefit the most.

Introduced in the U.S. Senate last week, S. 1150 - the Raise the Wage Act - would increase the federal minimum wage to $12 per hour by 2020. The Center for American Progress crunched the numbers, and its director of women's economic policy, Sarah Jane Glynn, said they found that 57 percent of those who would receive a raise are working women.

"Women are much more likely to be concentrated in low-wage work than men," she said, "and oftentimes, these are workers in industries that are heavily female-dominated, like the service industry, food service, retail, child care, sectors like that."

Opponents of raising the minimum wage argue that it would increase unemployment for lower-skilled workers, but Glynn countered that past increases have raised earnings and reduced poverty without leading to job losses. She added that a person working full time at the current minimum wage would earn slightly more than $15,000 a year, below the federal poverty line for a household with any number of children.

"These are adults, these are parents, these are people who are still having to rely on public benefits because they are below the poverty line even though they are working full time," she said. "That really does highlight the fact that we need to do something. This is an untenable situation."

Glynn said one-third of women workers who would be affected by the increase are mothers.

Ohio's minimum wage of $8.10 an hour is higher than the federal wage of $7.25 an hour.

The analysis is online at americanprogress.org. The Raise the Wage Act is at congress.gov.


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