Tuesday, June 30, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. Announces 50-cent-an-hour Increase In Minimum Wage, Starting In September

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Feb, 2017 12:11 PM
  • B.C. Announces 50-cent-an-hour Increase In Minimum Wage, Starting In September
VICTORIA — The minimum wage in British Columbia will rise by 50 cents to $11.35 an hour in mid-September.
 
The ministry says there will be an identical increase of 50 cents to the minimum wage for liquor servers, bringing it to $10.10 per hour in September.
 
The Jobs, Tourism and Skills Training Ministry says the new wages include a 20-cent increase based on British Columbia's 2016 Consumer Price Index, plus an additional 30 cents.
 
The minimum wage was raised to $10.85 an hour last September.
 
Irene Lanzinger, president of the B.C. Federation of Labour, said at the time that still left 500,000 workers earning poverty level wages of below $15 an hour.
 
In a news release, the ministry says when self-employed people are excluded, there were 93,800 workers earning the minimum wage last year in a workforce of just under two million people.
 
The ministry says it will announce more details later on increases in the daily rates for live-in home support and camp leaders, monthly rates for resident caretakers and the pay rates affecting farm workers harvesting certain fruits and vegetables.

MORE National ARTICLES

Woman, 30, Serving 1st-Degree Murder Sentence Dies In Ontario Prison

Woman, 30, Serving 1st-Degree Murder Sentence Dies In Ontario Prison
KITCHENER, Ont. — Correctional Service Canada says a woman serving a sentence for first-degree murder has died in an Ontario prison.

Woman, 30, Serving 1st-Degree Murder Sentence Dies In Ontario Prison

New B.C. Real Estate Data Shows Majority Of Foreign Buyers From China

New B.C. Real Estate Data Shows Majority Of Foreign Buyers From China
About three per cent of the 10,148 home sales made between June 10 and 29 were foreign buyers

New B.C. Real Estate Data Shows Majority Of Foreign Buyers From China

Vancity Report Shows Vancouver Rental Market Too Pricey For Young Workers

Vancity Report Shows Vancouver Rental Market Too Pricey For Young Workers
A new report from Vancouver City Credit Union explores the tight rental market across Vancouver and the problem it poses for the so-called millennial generation.

Vancity Report Shows Vancouver Rental Market Too Pricey For Young Workers

Too Hot: Montreal Construction Workers Walk Off The Job

Too Hot: Montreal Construction Workers Walk Off The Job
Several hundred construction workers at Montreal's superhospital downed tools for part of the day Wednesday because of the heat.

Too Hot: Montreal Construction Workers Walk Off The Job

Four Montreal Cops Arrested, With One Facing Charge Of Obtaining Sexual Services

Four Montreal Cops Arrested, With One Facing Charge Of Obtaining Sexual Services
Faycal Djelidi faces nine charges and David Chartrand four, Pichet told a news conference.

Four Montreal Cops Arrested, With One Facing Charge Of Obtaining Sexual Services

Case Of Ex-Nazi Death Squad Member Back In Federal Cabinet's Hands

Case Of Ex-Nazi Death Squad Member Back In Federal Cabinet's Hands
OTTAWA — A long-running legal case about whether former Nazi death squad member Helmut Oberlander will be stripped of his citizenship is back in the hands of the federal government cabinet.

Case Of Ex-Nazi Death Squad Member Back In Federal Cabinet's Hands