$16 living wage proposed for Waterloo Region families - Action News
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Kitchener-Waterloo

$16 living wage proposed for Waterloo Region families

Waterloo Region workers need to earn at least $16 per hour to afford the cost of living, according to a new report released by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives.
Lyndsey Butcher and the Waterloo Region Living Wage Steering Committee have crunched the numbers and found that people in Waterloo Region need to make at least $16/hr to support a family of four. (Jackie Sharkey/CBC)

Waterloo Region workers with families need to earn at least $16 per hour to afford the cost of living, according to a new report released by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives.

Released Thursday, the report was guided in part bya number of local non-profit groups andrepresentatives from the region's business community.

Itcalculates the basic cost of living for a family of four two working parents and two childrenby looking at everything from the cost of food and shelter to the cost of insurance and recreation. The calculation also includes a small contingency fund for emergencies.

"The living wage really tries to provide a standard of living where a family can live in dignity," said co-authorLyndseyButcher in an interview.

According to the report, that sort oflife in Waterloo Region would cost a family of four $65,868.75 each year, which works out to an hourly wage of $16 if both adults are working full time year-round.

The report is not suggesting that governments raise the minimum wage, which is $11 per hour for most employees in Ontario, said Butcher

"This is not...a mandated wage, it really is a suggestion for businesses," she said. "This is one way that employers in our community can play a role in reducing poverty...without having to wait for other levels of government to sort of step in."

Living on minimum wage a struggle

University student Lex McKenna is trying to support herself and her family on a part-time, minimum-wage job. She's managing, but is always worried about how she'll pay the bills.

"Do I have the money to buy this month's groceries? I'm not really sure. Am I going to have rent this month? I don't know;" she said.

If she were earning $16 per hour, McKenna said she could stop relying on student debt to get her through her studies.

Not everyone is convinced that the $16 living wage holds the key to a dignified life. Nicole King is currently earning $16 per hour, but saidshe's still struggling to make ends meet.

"Rent isn't that cheap...and then you've got groceries, babysitter, hydro, all those other bills," she said. "Everything that I have goes to what I need and then I'm left with not very much.

If employers raise their wages to $16 per hour, the cost of living will rise as well, she said.

Read the report here