Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because of the inflation, tariffs, and money printing to service the debt, $25 is the new $18. You all are getting raises too. If not fast enough, please apply at a restaurant til you get yours.
The dishwasher will still be poor, but at least they can pay their portion of the rent working the same hours they did before.
My rent went from $1950 (2023) to $2200 (2024) to $2400. Add everything else that went up.
Don't worry about people not eating out. The restaurants have never been busier in DC. Not enough restaurants left I guess. It's more of a luxury now, but plenty of customers for the ones still open. Doesn't mean the restaurant makes money.
The people who cannot afford to eat out, haven't been coming since 2022.
DC wants to pay a living wage. That means being able to afford the SFH American dream, not renting a room and living with roommates.
Single family homes are in the suburbs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Imagine having to pay some teenager the equivalent of roughly $55k per year just to wash dishes or scrub toilets:
https://www.nbcwashington.com/news/local/workers-labor-advocates-call-for-dc-to-raise-minimum-wage-to-25/4025867/
R.I.P. DC economy. No am I going to pay $100/entree for mediocre food or, $900/night for a garbage hotel simply because businesses have to cover out control labor costs.
No teenagers are washing dishes or scrubbing toilets.
And BTW, why shouldn't people who do those jobs earn that much? Those are hard jobs. They certainly have more importance and value than, say, lobbying, consulting, private equity or being a legislative aide.
But, oh, wait, you were TROLLING, weren't you?
You know what's hard? Clearing debris out of a field like rolling stones and moving logs. Just because it is hard doesnt mean it is valuable. It requires zero mental aptitude and zero special skills like carpentry or electrical knowledge. Why should we over reward low skill, low knowledge jobs?
Because they’re far more important than carpentry, electrical or clearing debris from a field.
You like clean bathrooms and plates, amrite? You value those more than a mitre cut doorframe? You certainly use them more frequently.
High knowledge jobs aren’t valuable. Someone who does, say, content marketing or is a lawyer or accountant is not nearly as important to society as people who clean toilets and dishes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Imagine having to pay some teenager the equivalent of roughly $55k per year just to wash dishes or scrub toilets:
https://www.nbcwashington.com/news/local/workers-labor-advocates-call-for-dc-to-raise-minimum-wage-to-25/4025867/
R.I.P. DC economy. No am I going to pay $100/entree for mediocre food or, $900/night for a garbage hotel simply because businesses have to cover out control labor costs.
No teenagers are washing dishes or scrubbing toilets.
And BTW, why shouldn't people who do those jobs earn that much? Those are hard jobs. They certainly have more importance and value than, say, lobbying, consulting, private equity or being a legislative aide.
But, oh, wait, you were TROLLING, weren't you?
You know what's hard? Clearing debris out of a field like rolling stones and moving logs. Just because it is hard doesnt mean it is valuable. It requires zero mental aptitude and zero special skills like carpentry or electrical knowledge. Why should we over reward low skill, low knowledge jobs?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because of the inflation, tariffs, and money printing to service the debt, $25 is the new $18. You all are getting raises too. If not fast enough, please apply at a restaurant til you get yours.
The dishwasher will still be poor, but at least they can pay their portion of the rent working the same hours they did before.
My rent went from $1950 (2023) to $2200 (2024) to $2400. Add everything else that went up.
Don't worry about people not eating out. The restaurants have never been busier in DC. Not enough restaurants left I guess. It's more of a luxury now, but plenty of customers for the ones still open. Doesn't mean the restaurant makes money.
The people who cannot afford to eat out, haven't been coming since 2022.
DC wants to pay a living wage. That means being able to afford the SFH American dream, not renting a room and living with roommates.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because of the inflation, tariffs, and money printing to service the debt, $25 is the new $18. You all are getting raises too. If not fast enough, please apply at a restaurant til you get yours.
The dishwasher will still be poor, but at least they can pay their portion of the rent working the same hours they did before.
My rent went from $1950 (2023) to $2200 (2024) to $2400. Add everything else that went up.
Don't worry about people not eating out. The restaurants have never been busier in DC. Not enough restaurants left I guess. It's more of a luxury now, but plenty of customers for the ones still open. Doesn't mean the restaurant makes money.
The people who cannot afford to eat out, haven't been coming since 2022.
DC wants to pay a living wage. That means being able to afford the SFH American dream, not renting a room and living with roommates.
Anonymous wrote:The minimum wage in PG County is $17.00. I imagine that those who work in similar jobs in PG will try to transfer to a DC location. That is a big difference in salary to simply cross the line.
Anonymous wrote:Because of the inflation, tariffs, and money printing to service the debt, $25 is the new $18. You all are getting raises too. If not fast enough, please apply at a restaurant til you get yours.
The dishwasher will still be poor, but at least they can pay their portion of the rent working the same hours they did before.
My rent went from $1950 (2023) to $2200 (2024) to $2400. Add everything else that went up.
Don't worry about people not eating out. The restaurants have never been busier in DC. Not enough restaurants left I guess. It's more of a luxury now, but plenty of customers for the ones still open. Doesn't mean the restaurant makes money.
The people who cannot afford to eat out, haven't been coming since 2022.
Anonymous wrote:This is why states like CA are foolish when they arbitrarily increase the minimum wage. It has to result in increased prices, layoffs or banks. Econ 101 tells us that