In 2017, the City of Vancouver committed to ensuring its employees — and workers for city contractors — were paid enough to live there. 

At the time, Vancouver was  the biggest employer in the country to offer a living wage based on the  cost of rent, food and other necessities. 

“It was the largest living wage  municipality, and it did a tremendous job over the years in encouraging  other businesses to sign on,” said Anastasia French, the director of Living Wage for Families BC.  Then-mayor Gregor Robertson told media it was a way to guarantee  workers “a basic level of opportunity” in an expensive place to live and  work. 

On Jan. 31, Vancouver city council voted in  a closed meeting to cancel the policy, which covered both city  employees and workers for contractors.  

Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim  pointed out in a prepared statement that the living wage defined by  Living Wage for Families BC rose 17.6 per cent this year, a product of  rising rents and food costs. Sim said the city would instead transition  to paying workers a minimum salary based on a five-year average of the  living wage, which changes year-to-year. 

But unions and some city councillors say the change denies some workers a needed pay boost.

“They are telling the people who help keep  Vancouver running that their labour may be welcome, but they and their  families are not,” said the BC Federation of Labour in a statement.

Other activists worry the city’s withdrawal from a program it once championed will hurt support for living wage programs.

“I’m concerned it’s going to reverberate  across the province,” said CUPE 15 president Warren Williams, whose  union represents thousands of city staff.

The living wage is calculated as the amount  of money two income-earners would need to support a family of four in a  given municipality. Employers certified by Living Wage for Families BC  agree to increase their base rate of pay in line with that wage, which  factors in the cost of rent, child care, food and other basics. 

This year, the Canadian Centre for Policy  Alternatives said the living wage in Vancouver rose from $20.52 to  $24.08 an hour, due largely to rising food costs. The centre also  changed how it calculated rental cost to reflect the disparity between  new renters and long-time tenants who benefit from rental protections. 

On Feb.  27 CBC News reported Vancouver was considering ending the living wage. 

In fact, the decision to axe the policy had  been made a month earlier. Coun. Pete Fry said the vote happened at a  Jan. 31 meeting held in camera, meaning councillors couldn’t disclose  what happened or how their peers voted. 

“It definitely had a bearing on the budget  decision we just made,” Fry said. Last week city council — which is  controlled by Sim’s ABC party — voted to pass a budget including a 10.7-per-cent property tax hike and a big boost to police funding.

Sim said most city employees were already  paid more than the 2023 living wage. He also said that paying workers a  wage based on the five-year average was “more practical” and would  “smooth out annual fluctuations for workers  and contract employees.” 

French said the organization does allow  certified employers to pay less than the living wage if they provide  other benefits to make up for it. But it doesn’t let them pay an average  based on costs in previous years. 

“You can’t negotiate your rent based on what it was five years ago,” French said. 

The city also said paying a  minimum wage that fluctuates every year was difficult given its  obligations under collective agreements. But Williams, the union leader,  doesn’t buy that. He says the change is most likely to affect  contractors like tow truck drivers, security guards and cleaners.

“One of the big concerns I have is that this opens the door for contractors to low ball,” Williams said. 

Fry and fellow Coun. Christine Boyle confirmed they both voted against the motion. 

“The living wage is an important indicator  of what it actually costs to live in Vancouver,” Boyle said. “People who  work for the City of Vancouver should be able to afford to live here.  That’s a pretty basic expectation.” 

The Tyee reached out to Sim’s office for  additional comment, including what sticking with the living wage program  might have cost, but did not hear back by publication time. 

The living wage project was created as a  way to bridge the gap between the legislated minimum wage and what it  actually costs to live in a city like Vancouver. Today, French’s  organization boasts more than 250 certified living wage employers. In  2017, the B.C. government even tasked a commission with investigating the transition from a minimum to a living wage, though its most recent report has yet to be completed.

But French said Vancouver’s withdrawal is a  blow for the program. The city was the largest municipality to  guarantee a living wage. 

Other participating cities have made no  sign of leaving the program. The City of Victoria recently recertified  as a living wage employer this year. The City of New Westminster  confirmed in a statement it had no plans to leave the program. City of  North Vancouver Mayor Linda Buchanan said in a prepared statement that  paying the living wage was more important than ever given the rising  cost of living in the region. 

“Local governments have a responsibility to  ensure that those who we do business with are paying their employees a  wage that will allow them to live in the community where they work,”  Buchanan wrote. “As mayor, I am committed to upholding our Living Wage  Employer certification, full stop.”  

But French fears Vancouver’s withdrawal  would have a “chilling effect” that could push employers to either  abandon the program or reconsider joining.  

“We are nervous about that,” she said.

Vancouver and District Labour Council  president Stephen von Sychowski slammed the city’s decision,  particularly the fact it happened in a closed meeting. He noted the city  staff who are affected by the policy change were already on the lowest  end of its pay spectrum. 

“Decertifying as a living wage employer  saves a small amount of money on the backs of people who need it the  most,” von Sychowski said. 

French acknowledged some employers may be  struggling to keep paying the living wage given the increase this year.  But many small businesses participating in the program say they are  making it work. Patricia Massy, the owner of Massy Books in Chinatown,  says offering a living wage is a matter of pride for her business in one  of the most expensive cities in North America. She added that it has  helped her retain employees at a time the labour market is tight. 

“I’m not trying to shame anybody for not  being a living wage employer, but I’m certainly not going to hold back  from shaming the city,” Massy said. 

“Those are essential services, and it just  seems so wrong to cut the wages of the people at the lowest end of the  pay grade when they’re already getting paid the least.”

By Zak Vescera, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter

Original Published on Mar 07, 2023 at 20:02

This item reprinted with permission from   The Tyee   Vancouver, British Columbia
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