The Federation of Protestant Welfare Agencies (FPWA), the Fiscal Policy
Institute (FPI) and the Human Services Council (HSC) are co-leading a
campaign, #15andFunding, to advocate for a statewide $15 per hour
minimum wage
for all low-wage workers, and to ensure that the call for an increased
wage includes funding for state and city contracted nonprofit human
services workers.
The three groups have come together to release a
report on the current state of the human services sector, highlight
the pervasive low-wages that plague its workers, and offer
recommendations on how to ensure these workers are included in a
statewide minimum wage increase.
The report found that the human services sector employs more than
200,000 workers across New York State. These workers provide essential
services to communities including afterschool programs, child welfare,
early education, services for
older adults and homeless families and individuals. The report also
found that this is a highly educated workforce where more than
two-thirds have some level of college education, and 45% hold four-year
bachelor’s degrees or higher. Yet, half of the human
services workforce currently makes under $15 per hour, which for a
40-hour work week comes to under $31,000 per year. Thirty percent of the
sector makes less than $10.50/hour, adding up to a yearly full-time
salary of $21,840 or less. In most parts of the
state, this level of compensation is not sufficient to meet the high
costs of living. Because of these economic realities, the human services
workforce often looks remarkably like the populations they serve, and
qualifies for the same supportive services.
The campaign is calling on New York State to:
Raise the minimum wage to $15 per hour for ALL workers in New York State
Ensure that employees at nonprofits are covered by the minimum wage increase
Amend state and local government human services contracts to fund the wage increase
Unlike for-profit
businesses, nonprofits are not able to increase the price of their
services to account for increased wages. While nonprofit organizations
must be included in a wage increase to remain competitive
in workforce recruitment and retention, they do not have the means to
increase their incoming revenue. In New York State, roughly 2,500
nonprofits rely on state contracts to carry out their essential human
services. If those contract amounts do not increase
with an increased minimum wage, the new minimum wage becomes an
unfunded mandate that will negatively impact service delivery and likely
cause many nonprofits to cease providing services.
“We are encouraged by Governor Cuomo’s plan to raise the minimum wage for fast-food and state employees to $15 per hour,” said
FPWA CEO and Executive Director Jennifer Jones Austin.
“It is critical that all workers in New York State earn no less than $15
per hour, including nonprofit employees working for human service
nonprofits under contract with the State. Human
Services workers are highly skilled and committed, but face pervasively
low wages, high work load, and few career advancements. If they are
excluded from a wage increase many will be forced to choose between the
work they love or seek employment in a sector
that pays a living wage.”
James Parrott, Deputy Director and Chief Economist of the Fiscal policy Institute
stated, “Recruitment and retention of human service workers by
nonprofits is already a serious problem because
wages are so low in this sector, particularly given the
responsibilities involved. Turnover rates exceed 30 percent in some
parts of the sector. Without additional funding in government contracts,
the State will be hard-pressed to ensure that these critical
human services continue to be delivered in a quality manner.”
"Nonprofit human
service providers across the state support efforts to battle income
inequality by raising the minimum wage to $15 an hour,”
said Allison Sesso, Executive Director of the Human Services Council.
“This workforce delivers essential government services that promote the
health and well-being of residents across the state, but despite the
clear importance of the function
they provide, these highly skilled and educated workers are poorly
compensated. Financial starvation in this sector has led to program and
organization closures, diminished quality and reach of services, greater
signs of ongoing financial instability among
too many organizations, and a very low-wage workforce with diminishing
benefits. A living wage will support human service providers as they
work to combat poverty, foster equity, and help New York’s communities
reach their full potential, bettering the lives
of millions of New Yorkers."
Assemblyman Marcos A. Crespo, chair of the Assembly Puerto Rican/Hispanic Task Force, stated,
“According to five decades of data, wages have been flat or even
falling since 1964 regardless of job growth cycles. Over the past 25
years alone, food prices have increased by an average of 2.5% per year.
That means that the cost of feeding our families
has increased by over 62% while wages have been stagnant. What other
evidence than hunger do we need to demonstrate that the current minimum
wage is inadequate, insufficient and intolerable! It is clear to me
that any effort focused on lifting working families
and their children out of poverty must include a wage that gives them
the ability to feed, house and clothes themselves without the fear of
homelessness or going hungry.”
"Buffalo has been ranked the nation's 4th poorest city," said
Assemblywoman Crystal D Peoples-Stokes, "This isn't
because people aren't working, they are. In fact, in some cases,
they're working more than one job- the issue is they aren’t making a
living wage. In 2015, in one of the wealthiest countries
in the world and in one of the most progressive states in the nation,
we have hard working families struggling to make ends meet. It's time
to do what's right. This is why I am proud to stand and fight with the
human services industry to give people a living
wage."
Coalition Members
ACRIA, Brooklyn Kindergarten Society, Care for the Homeless, CDPAANYS, Center Against, Domestic Violence, Center for Children's Initiatives, Child Development Support Corporation, Citizens' Committee for Children, Coalition Against Hunger, Council of Family And Child Care Agencies, Day Care Council of NY, Exodus Transitional Community, Family M. Isaacs Neighborhood Center, Federation of Protestant Welfare Agencies, Fiscal Policy Institute, Forestdale, Inc., Graham Windham, Good Shepherd Services, Heights and Hills, Homeless Services United, Inc., Housing and Services, Inc., Human Services Council, InterAgency Council of Developmental Disabilities Agencies, Inc., Jacob A. Riis Neighborhood Settlement House, Lower East Side Family Union, Lincoln Square Neighborhood House, LiveOn NY, MCCNY Charities, Inc., MercyFirst, New Alternatives for Children, New York Asian Women's Center, New York Memory Center, NY Association of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Providers, Inc. (ASAP), NY Therapeutic Communities, Inc., NYC Employment and Training Coalition, NYS Coalition for Children's Behavioral Health, Outreach, Penington Friends House, Riverstone Senior Life Services, Safe Horizon, SCO Family of Services, Schuyler Center for Analysis and Advocacy, Stein Senior Center, Supportive Housing Network of New York, The Coalition of Behavioral Health Agencies, The Greater New York Labor Religion Coalition, Turning Point Brooklyn, Inc., Union Settlement Association, United Neighborhood Houses , Urban Pathways, Women's Center for Education and Career Advancement, Women's City Club of New York, You Gotta Believe.
ACRIA, Brooklyn Kindergarten Society, Care for the Homeless, CDPAANYS, Center Against, Domestic Violence, Center for Children's Initiatives, Child Development Support Corporation, Citizens' Committee for Children, Coalition Against Hunger, Council of Family And Child Care Agencies, Day Care Council of NY, Exodus Transitional Community, Family M. Isaacs Neighborhood Center, Federation of Protestant Welfare Agencies, Fiscal Policy Institute, Forestdale, Inc., Graham Windham, Good Shepherd Services, Heights and Hills, Homeless Services United, Inc., Housing and Services, Inc., Human Services Council, InterAgency Council of Developmental Disabilities Agencies, Inc., Jacob A. Riis Neighborhood Settlement House, Lower East Side Family Union, Lincoln Square Neighborhood House, LiveOn NY, MCCNY Charities, Inc., MercyFirst, New Alternatives for Children, New York Asian Women's Center, New York Memory Center, NY Association of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Providers, Inc. (ASAP), NY Therapeutic Communities, Inc., NYC Employment and Training Coalition, NYS Coalition for Children's Behavioral Health, Outreach, Penington Friends House, Riverstone Senior Life Services, Safe Horizon, SCO Family of Services, Schuyler Center for Analysis and Advocacy, Stein Senior Center, Supportive Housing Network of New York, The Coalition of Behavioral Health Agencies, The Greater New York Labor Religion Coalition, Turning Point Brooklyn, Inc., Union Settlement Association, United Neighborhood Houses , Urban Pathways, Women's Center for Education and Career Advancement, Women's City Club of New York, You Gotta Believe.
Source: The Federation of Protestant Welfare Agencies
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