黑料正能量 Note: NYS nonprofits would like to give their workers higher salaries in keeping with Governor Cuomo鈥檚 proposal to hike the minimum wage to $16 per hour by 2019 in NYC and 2021 elsewhere. But they are alarmed about how to pay for it without increased funding from the Governor. A coalition of nonprofits providing services to 黑料正能量ers with developmental disabilities called the Coalition of Provider Agencies projects the wage proposal will cost those providers alone, an extra $270 million in the coming fiscal year that begins April 1. 听
黑料正能量 is working with other health and behavioral health nonprofit advocacy groups on this issue. We will sending around a survey to gauge the impact of a minimum wage hike that was created by CHCANYS. 听听
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Can North Country Not-For-Profits Afford $15 An Hour?
by Zach Hirsch North Country Public Radio听 January 22, 2015
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Not-for-profit agencies and workers are really nervous about the proposed minimum wage increase to $15 an hour.
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These are agencies that try to help their communities in some way. They range from hospitals to research labs to social services. And they have a significant role in the North Country economy. An Adirondack Foundation study in 2013 found that 36 non-profits in the North Country generated more than $400 million in economic activity and provided roughly 10 percent of all the jobs in the region.
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Since nonprofits rely on state funding, donations, and grants for their revenue, they have little control over their own budgets. If the minimum wage goes up to $15 an hour, they would need more donations and funding from state and local government. But many of these agencies fear they won鈥檛 be able to find that extra money.
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Genie Denton is a part-time caregiver for people with developmental disabilities at Clinton County ARC. She makes from $9.75 to just under $12 an hour, depending on the shift. On those wages, Denton said 鈥渋t鈥檚 impossible鈥 to make ends meet. 鈥淵ou have to embrace creativity,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 get my clothes from a second-hand store. My car I will drive till it鈥檚 dead.鈥 鈥淚 count every penny,鈥 she said, and added that every day is a struggle. She鈥檚 a single mom with three kids, and she also works a second part-time job at another not-for-profit. Getting a raise to $15 an hour would really help her out. 鈥淭hat would be a significant boost,” Denton said, “but I think that we have to be wise enough to know that it鈥檚 a bigger issue than that, and if everybody made more money what would the impact be on our economy? Where鈥檚 the money going to come from?鈥
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So, this is the number one concern you hear when you talk to people in the not-for-profit world about the minimum wage; state and local government officials don鈥檛 yet have a plan for helping these agencies pay for the proposed increase. Governor Cuomo didn鈥檛 mention nonprofits at all when he talked about the wage increase in his budget address last week. 鈥淭here is an unhealthy income inequality gap that is only growing,鈥 Cuomo said. 鈥淚 say lift up the poor and the working families of this state and pay a real, decent wage.鈥
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鈥淭he state has, over the last probably seven or eight years since the recession, really cut back on nonprofits to begin with,鈥 said Doug Sauer, CEO of the New York Council on Nonprofits, a network of about 3,000 agencies statewide. He said most of them support the concept of a wage increase, but they鈥檙e in no fiscal position to deal with it right now. 鈥淚t鈥檚 true that we have a workforce that may be the working poor themselves in many cases, and are serving the working poor. And that鈥檚 a problem and our society shouldn鈥檛 allow that to happen. But until there鈥檚 a change in attitude that it鈥檚 a deserving workforce that should be paid reasonable salaries or above living wage, we got a problem,鈥 Sauer said. Sauer said he thinks the state will keep cutting nonprofits鈥 funding, leaving agencies scrambling if the minimum wage hike becomes reality.
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Steve Knight agrees. He鈥檚 CEO of United Helpers, a group that works with elderly and developmentally disabled people in St. Lawrence and Jefferson counties. According to Knight, a big part of the problem is this: unlike a for-profit business that can just raise the price of coffee or whatever it鈥檚 selling to compensate for the wage hike, it鈥檚 much harder for not-for-profits to absorb the cost increase. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 control our reimbursement, so we can鈥檛 change our revenue if costs go up. We have to live within the parameters that we鈥檙e given for reimbursement,鈥 Knight said. He said the minimum wage increase would cost United Helpers about $5 million. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 10 percent of our total operating. I don鈥檛 know where that money would come from.鈥
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Other nonprofit groups said the wage increase would force them to consolidate, end programs, and reduce workers鈥 health insurance and other benefits. And Knight said it鈥檚 not like you can raise the minimum wage and leave it at that. If you raise the minimum, he said, you鈥檒l have to raise the entire pay scale, which would cost even more. He thinks the state hasn鈥檛 taken that into account. He said, 鈥淚 mean there are ripple effects when you change people鈥檚 reimbursement, when you change people鈥檚 salaries or wages,鈥 he said. 鈥溾榃hy are they getting a raise and I鈥檓 not?鈥欌
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鈥淵eah, I think that I would advocate for myself to make more,鈥 said Shayna Latour, a home caregiver for a developmentally disabled child in the Town of Peru. She makes $15 an hour now, and it鈥檚 just barely enough to cover her living expenses. If the starting pay goes up, she鈥檇 want a raise, too. She鈥檚 worked this job for almost five years. 鈥淚 would probably ask for the same amount of raise, so at least $21. I know that would be a hardship but that鈥檚 the reality of the situation,鈥 Latour said.
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State officials have said they are sensitive to the nonprofits’ concerns. A spokesperson for the state budget office said it is too early to say how much the state would chip in. Assemblywoman Janet Duprey said she鈥檒l fight to make sure helping agencies get the funding they need to support the wage increase. 鈥淚f there鈥檚 one thing that government absolutely in my opinion has the obligation to do, it鈥檚 to take care of those who cannot under any circumstances take care of themselves. And I鈥檓 not going to sit by and quietly let that happen, so, yes I will be very vocal,鈥 Duprey said.
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But most nonprofits aren鈥檛 getting their hopes up. Daphne Pickert, CEO of St. Lawrence NYSARC, said, 鈥淭he whole scenario is rather grim.鈥 Genie Denton, the Clinton County ARC caregiver, said she deserves to make a living wage so she can support her family, 鈥渂ut at the same time I know this money can鈥檛 just come from thin air.鈥
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鈥淚 don鈥檛 know what the utopian ideal situation is because I don鈥檛 think it exists yet,鈥 she said. It鈥檚 true 鈥 the $15-an-hour minimum wage is still just a proposal, and lawmakers will debate it in the coming weeks. Denton said she hopes state officials don鈥檛 forget about her line of work in the process.
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