Tom Mulcair says he will propose $15 federal minimum wage - Action News
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Tom Mulcair says he will propose $15 federal minimum wage

NDP Leader Tom Mulcair says he will put the idea of a $15-an-hour minimum wage to a vote in Parliament when it resumes next week.

Liberals scrapped the regulation in 1996

Tom Mulcair on federal minimum wage RAW

10 years ago
Duration 2:51
NDP leader pledges to put forth a plan to raise the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour

NDP Leader Tom Mulcair says he will put the idea of a $15 an hour minimum wage to a vote in Parliament when it resumes next week.

"Household debt in Canada is skyrocketing right now, families are having more and more trouble getting by. The good middle class jobs that people used to be able to rely on just aren't there any more," Mulcair said, speaking in Vancouver on Saturday.

The NDP plan would start the minimum wage at$12-an-hour, which would gradually rise to $15 by 2019. This would only apply to federally-regulated industries which includes modes of transport such as railways and ferries, phone services, broadcasting, banks and mining.

"There are hundreds of thousands of families in Canada living on minimum wage, struggling just to scrape by. If we're against poverty in this country, how can we accept that somebody who works full time lives in poverty?"

TheNDPplan would reverse the Liberal governments 1996 decision to scrap the federal minimum wage.Since then, each province and territory has set their own minimum wage, which ranges from a low of $10in New Brunswick to a high of $11in Nunavut and Ontario.

Mulcair says the Liberals and Conservatives did nothing to raisethe bar while in power.

He says although the affected workers only amount to a small percent of Canada's overall workforce, raising their wage will pressurethe provinces to do more.

Female workers aged 15 to 24 account for about 60 per cent of all minimum wage workers in the country in 2005, the most recent year Statistics Canada studiedthe topic.

Mulcair is also going to address Unifor, Canada's largest privatesector union, which is meeting in Vancouver this weekend.

Today's Vancouver announcement is the first in what is expectedto be a number of NDP announcements as it rolls out detailed planks of its platform this fall.

The highest minimum wage is in Nunavut and Ontario. (CBC)

With files from CBC News