The One Fair Wage campaign is currently gathering the signatures required to place a minimum wage increase initiative on the 2018 ballot.
The measure would increase the state’s minimum wage to $10/hr in 2019; $10.65/hr in 2020; $11.25/hr in 2021; and $12/hr in 2022.
The initiative would also increase the minimum wage for tipped employees to 48 percent of state minimum wage by 2019; to 60 percent by 2020; to 70 percent by 2021; to 80 percent by 2022; to 90 percent by 2023 and to 100 percent by 2024 and thereafter.
MCHR strongly supports the One Fair Wage campaign and the long overdue increase in pay for the thousands of minimum wage workers who are so poorly paid that they struggle to provide for themselve and their families.
To show your support, see link below to sign the Michigan Minimum Wage Increase Initiative.
Saeed Khan, an MCHR board member and professor of Islamic Studies at Wayne State University, recently presented a paper on water rights and water exploitation in London at a conference sponsored by the Islamic Human Rights Commission.
The conference (“The New Colonialism: The American Model of Human Rights”) focused on the Americanization of Human Rights and how they have often become a tool of U.S.-led foreign policy, rather than a transformative discourse that seeks to liberate individuals and groups oppressed by unjust systems.
Khan spoke to the group about the steady erosion of water rights and the belief that all human beings have a right to water at an affordable price. In addition, Khan talked about the rapid advancement of corporate privatization and usurping of water rights in the U.S. and around the world.
See the photo diary here of the MCHR delegation’s recent trip to Colombia. MCHR Board Members Frank Hammer and Kim Redigan led the delegation which visited Colombia to support long-protesting ASOTRECOL workers.