Close X
Tuesday, October 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Alberta Premier Rachel Notley Defends Plan To Hike Minimum Wage By 2018

Darpan News Desk IANS, 18 Dec, 2015 12:52 PM
  • Alberta Premier Rachel Notley Defends Plan To Hike Minimum Wage By 2018
EDMONTON — The Alberta government is not wavering from its plan to raise the minimum wage despite an internal document that warns of the possibility of job losses.
 
The Canadian Federation of Independent Business is calling on the NDP to slow the plan after obtaining the Jobs ministry document through an access to information request
 
CFIB spokesman Richard Truscott says the memo tells a different story than the government has been saying.
 
He says the province has been maintaining that hiking the minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2018 would create jobs, not kill them.
 
But Premier Rachel Notley says the group is cherry-picking parts of the memo.
 
She says the federation is ignoring other important elements.
 
 
“The document you’re referring to, if you read it fully, essentially says we don’t know exactly what the outcome would be if this goes ahead as previously planned in 2018, and there’s a possibility we could have job losses.” she says. “But it doesn’t say definitively nor is it relying on a planned state of action that we’ve actually committed to yet.”
 
In fact, she says, the rest of the memo echoes previous statements from the NDP on the issue of minimum wage, and even says the recent hike to $11.20 an hour has rendered positive results already.
 
“The memo to which you’re referring to actually says that the steps that we’ve taken thus far at the very least has no negative impact,” she says, “and suggests that there is in fact research out there – as I have been saying all along – that suggests it might actually have a positive impact.”
 
Notley adds that if there are job losses, there is a plan to adjust the minimum wage roll-out.
 
“We’re going to to track what the implications have been as we moved forward,” she says. “We’re going to keep an eye on what’s happening in the economy overall, and to the level of job creation and job sustainability in Alberta and we’ll adjust accordingly.”

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. Inquest Told High Levels Of Anti-Anxiety Drug Found In Dead Autistic Boy

B.C. Inquest Told High Levels Of Anti-Anxiety Drug Found In Dead Autistic Boy
Thirty-nine-year-old Angie Robinson killed her severely autistic 16-year-old son Robert before she killed herself on April 3, 2014.

B.C. Inquest Told High Levels Of Anti-Anxiety Drug Found In Dead Autistic Boy

Guy Turcotte's Ex-wife Says She Never Believed He Could Kill Their Kids

Isabelle Gaston was back on the stand Tuesday at Guy Turcotte's first-degree murder trial.

Guy Turcotte's Ex-wife Says She Never Believed He Could Kill Their Kids

Toronto Cop Pleads Not Guilty In Death Of 18-year-old On Streetcar

Toronto Cop Pleads Not Guilty In Death Of 18-year-old On Streetcar
A Toronto police officer charged in the shooting death of a teenager on a streetcar two years ago has pleaded not guilty in the case.

Toronto Cop Pleads Not Guilty In Death Of 18-year-old On Streetcar

Investigation Into Air Canada Crash Landing In Halifax Releases Damage Pictures

Investigation Into Air Canada Crash Landing In Halifax Releases Damage Pictures
The photos are part of an update issued by the safety agency Tuesday that also provides details on the weather and flying conditions when Air Canada flight 624 hit the ground short of the runway on March 29.

Investigation Into Air Canada Crash Landing In Halifax Releases Damage Pictures

Some 34,000 Quebec Teachers Off The Job To Protest Lagging Contract Talks

Some 34,000 Quebec Teachers Off The Job To Protest Lagging Contract Talks
MONTREAL — French-language public school teachers are off the job today in some parts of Quebec as they protest lagging contract talks with the provincial government.

Some 34,000 Quebec Teachers Off The Job To Protest Lagging Contract Talks

Judge Rules Against Hockey Icon Guy Lafleur In Civil Suit Targeting Crown, Cops

Judge Rules Against Hockey Icon Guy Lafleur In Civil Suit Targeting Crown, Cops
MONTREAL — A Quebec Superior Court justice has ruled against former Montreal Canadiens great Guy Lafleur in his $2.16-million civil suit that targeted police and the Crown following a 2008 arrest.

Judge Rules Against Hockey Icon Guy Lafleur In Civil Suit Targeting Crown, Cops