Manitoba will have lowest minimum wage in Canada this October after Sask.'s hike to $13/hr - Action News
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Manitoba

Manitoba will have lowest minimum wage in Canada this October after Sask.'s hike to $13/hr

Manitoba is about to have thedubious distinction of offering the lowest minimum wage in Canada, after Saskatchewan announced its wage will increase to $13 and hour in October, with a plan to get it to $15 by 2024.

Unwanted distinction an 'embarrassment,' labour union says after Sask. announces plan to get to $15 by 2024

A pile of coins sits in a person's hand.
Manitoba's minimum wage will go up by 40 cents this October, but it will be 65 cents short of Saskatchewan's minimum wage. (Mark Blinch/Reuters)

Manitoba is about to have thedubious distinction of offering the lowest minimum wage in Canada.

The province will claim the title in October, after Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe announced on Tuesdayhis province will boost its minimum wage currently the country's lowest from $11.81 an hourto $13 an hour this fall.

It's part of a plan Moe's Saskatchewan Party government sayswill gradually get the province'sworkersto a minimum wage of$15 an hourby October 2024.

Saskatchewan has previously tied minimum wage increases to a formula based on the inflation rate. The province will temporarily divertfrom that formula to speed up its hikes.

Manitoba follows its own formula, informed by cost of living increases. As a result, the provincewill raise its minimum wage in October from $11.95 an hour to $12.35 a 40-cent increase,but one that will still leave Manitoba with the lowest wage in Canada.

"That's an embarrassment," Manitoba Federation of Labour president Kevin Rebeck said in a statement.

"And if Premier Heather Stefanson was concerned about the struggles facing low-wage workers in our province, she would be embarrassed too."

New Brunswick's minimum wage was dead last in Canada, until the province announced a plan late in 2021to increase wagesits labour minister called "downright embarrassing." That province boosted the wage by $1 in April of this year, bringing it to $12.75, and is planning another $1 per hour increase in October.

Kevin Rebeck, president of the Manitoba Federation of Labour, said provincial workers deserve more than the lowest minimum wage in the country. (Lyzaville Sale/CBC)

Rebeck accused Manitoba's government of leavingthousands of minimum wage earners in poverty, as families grapple withrising costs for everything from food to fuel.

"These increased costs hit low-wage workers particularly hard," he said.

Manitoba workers deserve better than a wage that is "dead last in the country," he said, calling for the province to "take immediate steps to makeManitoba's minimum wage a living wage."

NDP Leader Wab Kinewhas also previously called on the Progressive Conservative government to introduce a living wage.

"Manitobans work hard to provide for their families and build up our economy they deserve better than last place," he said.

"No one working full time should live in poverty. The PCs need to pay Manitobans a living wage and help families get ahead."

In question period last month,Labour Minister Reg Helwer said Manitoba has removedthe politics fromminimum wage increases by relying on a predetermined formula.

He accused former NDP governmentsof twice raising the minimum wage before an election to earn political points.

Indexing the minimum wage to inflation "provides cost predictability for employers and ensures the wage's purchasing power is maintained," a spokesperson for Helwer wrote in an email Tuesday.

The province consultsregularly with employer and employee groups and associations on the wage, the spokesperson said,and "monitors minimum wage levels across the country to ensure Manitoba's minimum is appropriate and sufficient."