Business
B.C. minimum wage to increase tomorrow
Published 11:46 PDT, Mon May 31, 2021
Last Updated: 2:45 PDT, Tue June 22, 2021
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B.C.’s lowest paid workers will get a boost in pay tomorrow.
The minimum wage is increasing to $15.20 per hour, with the lower discriminatory minimum wage for liquor servers also ending.
Over the past four years, B.C.'s general minimum wage has increased from $11.35 to $15.20 per hour. It has benefited close to 400,000 British Columbians over those years—the majority of whom are women, immigrants and youth. June 1 also marks the end of the discriminatory lower minimum wage for B.C. liquor servers, which disproportionally affects women.
"About 80 per cent of liquor servers are women, and the low liquor wage is a clear example of the gender pay gap we are fighting to eliminate," said Grace Lore, Parliamentary Secretary of Gender Equity. "Most minimum wage earners are women, often racialized women and newcomers who face barriers to accessing better-paying jobs. We need to work towards wages that workers can actually live on instead of being held back by."
When this work began, B.C. had one of the lowest minimum wages in the country, but was one of the most expensive places to live. B.C. now has a minimum wage that is the highest of any province and starting next year, the increases for minimum wage will be tied to inflation.
The gradual increase of the minimum wage over four years has given businesses time to prepare for each increase, offering them stability and certainty. The pandemic has presented unforeseen challenges over the last year, but the Province continues to support and assist those companies that have been impacted. B.C. currently leads all major provinces in job recovery.
As of June 1, the minimum wage rates are increasing as follows:
• General minimum wage increases to $15.20 an hour from $14.60 an hour.
• Liquor server minimum wage of $13.95 an hour is being eliminated and replaced with the general minimum wage of $15.20 an hour.
• Live-in camp leader minimum wage, per day, increases to $121.65 from $116.86; and resident caretaker minimum wage, per month, increases to $912.28, plus $36.56 per suite for those who manage nine to 60 residential suites and to $3,107.42 for 61 or more suites.