Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
National

British Columbia Launches Fair Wages Commission To Decide On $15 Minimum Wage

The Canadian Press, 05 Oct, 2017 04:33 PM
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's labour minister has appointed an economist to lead a commission to advise the government on boosting the province's minimum wage to $15 an hour.
     
    Prof. Marjorie Griffin Cohen of Simon Fraser University will chair the Fair Wages Commission, which also includes Ken Peacock, vice-president at the Business Council of British Columbia, and Ivan Limpright, president of the United Food and Commercial Workers Union.
     
    The commission is expected to deliver a report with a timeline to raise the minimum wage within 90 days of its first meeting.
     
    The New Democrats had previously set a deadline of 2021 to raise the minimum wage but Labour Minister Harry Bains said that will now be up to the commission to determine.
     
    "We want to de-politicize this whole process so that they consult with small businesses, consult with workers, consult with the community leaders to make sure that they come back with the recommendations that will give small businesses at least a gradual, predictable, and common sense increases so they have certainty to adjust their cost of labour over a period of time," he said.
     
    The NDP had promised to increase the minimum wage to $15 per hour but after forming a government it agreed with the Green party to set up a commission that would oversee regular rate reviews.
     
     
    The commission will also review wages of liquor servers and agricultural workers that are tied to separate rates.
     
    Bains said the commission has also been asked to report on closing the gap between the minimum and living wage, which varies between communities.
     
    Cohen said average hourly wages in B.C. are lower than the national average.
     
    "These low wages have contributed to growing inequality and poverty for many working people and their families," she said.
     
    The commission has a budget of $490,000 over two years, which will largely fund travel and consultations.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C.'s Only Support Group For HIV-Positive Women Closes After Funding Cuts

    B.C.'s Only Support Group For HIV-Positive Women Closes After Funding Cuts
    She was addicted to drugs and sleeping in decrepit hotels in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside when she was diagnosed with HIV about 13 years ago. She assumed it was a death sentence.

    B.C.'s Only Support Group For HIV-Positive Women Closes After Funding Cuts

    Former New Zealand Councillor Found Guilty Of First-Degree Murder In B.C.

    Former New Zealand Councillor Found Guilty Of First-Degree Murder In B.C.
    Peter Beckett had pleaded not-guilty to first-degree murder in the death of his wife, Laura Letts-Beckett, who drowned in a lake near Revelstoke, B.C., in August 2010.

    Former New Zealand Councillor Found Guilty Of First-Degree Murder In B.C.

    Man Dead In Early Morning Shooting In Richmond

    An RCMP news release says officers were called to a residential neighbourhood just after 3 a.m. to find the critically injured man, who could not be revived.

    Man Dead In Early Morning Shooting In Richmond

    Meet DARPAN Extraordinary Achievements Award Winners 2017

    Meet DARPAN Extraordinary Achievements Award Winners 2017
    DARPAN Magazine, hosted its 8th Annual Awards in the company of esteemed social, business and political elites. This spectacular red carpet event took place at Aria Convention Centre in Surrey on September 15.

    Meet DARPAN Extraordinary Achievements Award Winners 2017

    DARPAN Awards 2017 A Night To Cherish- See PICS And VIDEOS

    DARPAN Awards 2017 A Night To Cherish- See PICS And VIDEOS
    DARPAN Magazine, hosted its 8th Annual Awards in the company of esteemed social, business and political elites. This spectacular red carpet event took place at Aria Convention Centre in Surrey on September 15. 

    DARPAN Awards 2017 A Night To Cherish- See PICS And VIDEOS

    Man Who Feared He Would Harm Again If Freed From Prison Pleads Guilty To Surrey Teen's Murder

    Man Who Feared He Would Harm Again If Freed From Prison Pleads Guilty To Surrey Teen's Murder
    Raymond Caissie entered the plea Thursday before Justice Gregory Bowden in B.C. Supreme Court in New Westminster. 

    Man Who Feared He Would Harm Again If Freed From Prison Pleads Guilty To Surrey Teen's Murder