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MICHIGAN REPORT
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Information Pertinent to
Legislative and State Department Activities Since
1906
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REPORT NO. 167, VOLUME 45-- WEDNESDAY, AUGUST
30 2006
E.I.T.C., YOUTH WAGE IN FINAL
OVERTIME DEAL, MERIT STILL ON TABLE
A multi-part compromise to the minimum wage overtime issue -
that includes an earned income tax credit and a youth minimum
wage - is on its way to becoming law.
Separate action is also underway on potentially major
changes to the state's Merit Scholarship program, although that
provision is not part of the overtime agreement (see related
story).
The agreement effectively meets the Legislature's
self-imposed deadline to resolve the issue by September 1 to
allow companies to adjust their payroll schedules and systems
in time for the October 1 effective date of Michigan's new
minimum wage. The wage on that date will go from
the current $5.15 an hour to $6.95 an hour.
And the agreement will enact one proposal - the earned
income tax credit - that has been proposed and debated, and
generally dismissed, in the Legislature for literally
decades. The proposal will add a state credit to
the federal earned income tax credit.
The agreement drew praise from both business officials, for
resolving the overtime question, and representatives of social
action agencies, for enacting the earned income tax credit.
Because several elements of the agreement include Senate
bills that were just passed by that chamber on Wednesday, it
could not be completed on the same day (owing to the
constitution's five-day requirement on legislation) by the
House.
Three elements of the agreement are tie-barred together:
HB
6213, which clarifies that those workers are not now
eligible for overtime pay (such as salespeople working on
commission and long-haul truckers);
SB
453, which would create an earned income tax credit for low
income individuals in the state; and
SB
1364, that would create a "youth minimum wage" equally to
85 percent of the state's minimum wage.
Senate
Majority
Leader Ken Sikkema (R-Wyoming) said the package will help
the state's economy by correcting the overtime concerns that
could have affected as many as 350,000 workers, and by assuring
that lower income workers get to keep more money through the
earned income tax credit.
House
Speaker
Craig DeRoche (R-Novi) called the deal "a reasonable
compromise," adding that it made sense to put a minimum wage
and earned income tax credit in the same package because they
both give relief to people who earn lower incomes.
"The people earning these wages put the money right back
into Michigan's economy," he said.
And in a press release Governor Jennifer Granholm said
working families in Michigan were winners under the
agreement.
HB
6231 was the critical bill to resolve the overtime
issue and the subject of several weeks of
negotiations. Those negotiations continued into
Wednesday, with Mr. Sikkema, Senate Minority Leader Bob Emerson
(D-Flint), Mr. DeRoche and officials from Governor Jennifer
Granholm's administration at one point congregated in the
Senate's center aisle in discussions.
While it was understood sometime ago that whatever agreement
was reached would not include legislation to reverse a 2004
Supreme Court ruling that specified when people were eligible
for automotive insurance disability payments, there was no
effort made on Wednesday to even bring the issue up.
Changes were made to HB 6231 to ensure that all persons now
eligible for both the minimum wage and overtime will remain
eligible when the new minimum wage law takes effect.
The bill was also amended to allow some home health care
workers and day care workers, who are not eligible for overtime
pay under federal law, to be eligible for overtime and minimum
wage under Michigan law.
With those changes the bill passed 38-0, compared to the
narrow party-line approval of the bill earlier in the summer,
and it then breezed to the immediate effect approval it could
not win earlier. In the House the bill was passed
103-0.
Without immediate effect the bill would not have taken
effect until 90 days after the Legislature adjourns sine die,
which means the bill would not have likely taken effect until
April.
Charlie Owens of the Michigan branch of the National
Federation of Independent Businesses praised both parties for
coming together on the overtime proposals and saving state
jobs.
He also praised them for their action to pass the youth wage
since he said many small companies could not afford to hire
teenage workers at the higher minimum wage.
The youth wage would still pay workers under 18 a higher
wage than the current minimum wage, at approximately $5.91 an
hour beginning in October. Under the bill, workers
under 18 could be paid at $4.25 an hour for 90 days as a
training wage, and then paid at 85 percent of the minimum wage
rate.
But probably the key element in the agreement to win
Democratic support of the overtime changes was the earned
income tax credit.
Mr. Emerson had been introducing legislation to create an
earned income since the early 1980s. Even though
former President Ronald Reagan called the credit the greatest
anti-poverty measure government had ever passed, in the 1990s
the Republican chair of the Senate Finance Committee opposed
enacting a state earned income tax credit, saying the federal
program enacted in 1970s was rife with
corruption.
The specific bill approved Wednesday, SB 453, was introduced
by
Sen.
Nancy Cassis (R-Novi), chair of the Senate Finance
Committee, but no action had been taken on it before Mr.
Sikkema put it up as a negotiating point on the overtime
proposal.
The bill could affect more than 628,000 taxpayers in the
state. The measure will be phased in over two years
starting in 2008 and will eventually allow an eligible person
to claim 20 percent of the credit they now receive under the
federal credit.
In the first year the new credit could cost the state $95
million and in the second year $250 million. Mr.
Sikkema told reporters he wanted the provision to begin in 2008
so it would not affect the 2006-07 budget.
Asked why it had taken so long for the measure to finally
come to pass, Mr. Sikkema said: "It's all about timing, young
man."
The issue is one that appeals to core values of both
Republicans and Democrats, Mr. Sikkema said, since it involves
a tax cut for Republicans and helps the working poor for
Democrats.
Mr. Emerson said given recent U.S. Census statistics that
show overall incomes going down in Michigan and with Flint
having one of the highest concentrations of poverty the
legislation could prove immensely helpful to the poor.
When asked why the state credit did not match the 100
percent credit an individual receives under the federal
guidelines, House
Minority
Leader Dianne Byrum (D-Onondaga) said because of the
history of trying to get a state credit approved, "this is a
good start."
Ms. Byrum also said the win was for working families, but
added that the votes and discussions on a minimum wage increase
and earned income tax credit wouldn't have occurred if it
weren't for the proposed ballot initiative that was dropped
after Republicans took up the minimum wage increase earlier
this year.