Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
National

Minimum wage of $15.20 to take effect tomorrow

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 May, 2021 09:54 AM
  • Minimum wage of $15.20 to take effect tomorrow

The minimum wage in British Columbia jumps to $15.20 an hour on June 1, making it the highest rate of any province in Canada.

A statement from the Ministry of Labour says the rate climbs 60 cents per hour Tuesday, while the minimum wage for liquor servers will increase $1.25 per hour to match the minimum wage.

Labour Minister Harry Bains says the New Democrat government has kept its 2017 promise to provide regular, measured, predictable increases to raise the minimum wage to at least $15 per hour by June 2021.

The change also erases the lower minimum wage for liquor servers, ending what the Labour Ministry says was a discriminatory salary that disproportionally affected women.

The statement says B.C. has one of the highest costs of living in Canada and one of the lowest minimum wages when the increases began four years ago.

Future minimum wage increases will be tied to inflation starting in 2022.

Incremental raises since 2017 have given businesses time to prepare for each one, offering them stability and certainty, the ministry says.

Other increases include a more than $5-per-day boost in the minimum daily salary for a live-in camp leader, while the minimum monthly wage for a resident caretaker climbs to $912.28 plus $36.56 per suite for managers handling nine to 60 residential units.

The minimum monthly salary for a resident caretaker responsible for more than 61 suites increases to $3,107.42 on June 1.

About 121,000 people, roughly six per cent of the workforce, earned the previous minimum wage of $14.60, or less, last year, the ministry statement says.

A further 12 per cent, nearly 245,000 employees, earned under $15.20 per hour in 2020, says the ministry.

Rosario Agustin, a janitor in Vancouver, says the increases since 2017 have been important because the cost of living across the Lower Mainland is so high.

"I have worked at a skyscraper downtown for over 15 years, and most of that time I was making minimum wage and supporting my family as a single mom," Agustin says in the statement.

"The minimum going up helps raise the bar for all of us."

MORE National ARTICLES

Police probe death of B.C. boy injured last week

Police probe death of B.C. boy injured last week
Sgt. Frank Jang, spokesman for the homicide team, says the child died later that day from extensive injuries, but few other details are being released.

Police probe death of B.C. boy injured last week

Fleeing fraud suspect strikes two officers with his car

Fleeing fraud suspect strikes two officers with his car
The passenger was removed from the car and arrested for fraud, but the driver suddenly reversed the vehicle, striking the two officers.

Fleeing fraud suspect strikes two officers with his car

New record of overdose deaths for January: coroner

New record of overdose deaths for January: coroner
The BC Coroners Service says 165 people died from suspected overdoses in January, the largest number of lives lost due to illicit drugs in the first month of a calendar year.

New record of overdose deaths for January: coroner

COVID-19 cases climb again as variants spread

COVID-19 cases climb again as variants spread
Tam says there is an increase in new variants circulating in Canada, and no province has been spared — though several continue to ease anti-pandemic restrictions.

COVID-19 cases climb again as variants spread

International air travel falling with new rules

International air travel falling with new rules
The drop in international arrivals in early February is about four times the decline seen between early January and early February in 2019 and 2020.

International air travel falling with new rules

Economy fell 5.4 per cent in 2020: StatCan

Economy fell 5.4 per cent in 2020: StatCan
Statistics Canada says real gross domestic product shrank 5.4 per cent in 2020, the steepest annual decline since comparable data was first recorded in 1961.

Economy fell 5.4 per cent in 2020: StatCan