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Toronto protesters call for higher minimum wage

Protesters gathered in Torontos west end today to rally in support of raising the minimum wage in the province.

Crowd gathers at Dufferin Mall in city's west end seeking $14 an hour, up from $10.25

Ont. minimum wage protest

11 years ago
Duration 2:27
Protesters gathered in Torontos west end today in support of raising Ontario's minimum wage from $10.25 to $14 per hour.

Protesters gathered in Torontos west end today to rally in support of raising Ontario'sminimum wage.

About 100 people were outside Dufferin Mall Saturday afternoon. Many were holding red balloons and wearing t-shirts reading Fair Wages Now.

They were calling on the province to raise the legal minimum wage to $14 per hour. Its currently at $10.25, where its been frozen since 2010.

Organizers of Saturdays rally say the current rate leaves many workers below the poverty line, even if they have a full-time job.

"Someone making $10.25 right now is almost 20 per cent below the poverty line," said Sonia Singh from the Workers' Action Centre. "We're talking about around $19,000 a year."

Protesters gathered at Dufferin mall in Toronto's west end on Saturday to support increasing the provincial minimum wage from $10.25 to $14 an hour. (CBC)

According to Statistics Canada, more than 800,000 Canadians were working at or below minimum wage in 2009.

Estina Sebastian-Jeetan, a mother-of-two whoattended the rally, described some of the challenges she faces as a low-wage earner. "Sometimes I skip my medication in order to make ends meet," she said.

The province is currentlyconducting an in-depth review to explore how it could increase the minimum wage in a way that would satisfy both workers and businesses.

"We want to make sure that fairness and predictability is the key hallmark," Labour Minister Yasir Naqvi told CBC News reporter Steven D'Souza.

Naqvi said that linking wage increases to inflation rates which is what happens in other provinces is one of the options under consideration.

Some business groups are in favour of wage increases as long as it's gradual.

"We're very adamant that 40 per cent increases in one year is too much," said JamesRilett, Ontario vice-president for the Canadian Restaurant andFoodservicesAssociation. "It would be too much for our members to absorb."

But economist Jim Stanford says that minimum wage would actually benefit retailers.

If you put money into people's wage bills, then they're going to go out and spend it, especially those at the lower end of the labour market who don't save very much," said Stanford, who works for workers' union Unifor.

In Canada, Nunavut has the highest minimum wage at $11 per hour. Ontario is tied for fourth place, along with British Columbiaand Manitoba. Alberta has the lowest rate at $9.95 per hour.

Advocacy groups in Ontario staged protests similar to Saturday's rallyin March, the month when minimum wage increases have historically happened in the province.

Low wages have also been a hot topic in the U.S., where fast-food workers recently organized national walkouts.

With files from The Canadian Press