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Interesting article from New West Missoula, a prograssive Montana political blog ...
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SPECIAL PHOTO ESSAY
Making It on the Minimum Wage in Montana
By Brian McDermott, 11-06-06
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"I wish the rent," wrote poet Langston Hughes, "were heaven sent." The approximately 30,000 Montanans making less than $6.15 an hour would probably agree.
On Nov. 7, Montana’s ballot will include Initiative 151, which would raise the minimum wage statewide to $6.15 per hour. Yearly cost-of-living adjustments are also mandated by the initiative. Currently, the rate is $5.15 per hour and was set in 1996. A person earning the minimum wage and working full time will make about $10,700 per year. If the minimum wage went up to $6.15, that same person would earn about $12,800. A difference to be sure, but the raise is modest at best when a year of childcare in Montana is estimated to cost more than $5,000 and the average person spends more than $7,000 a year to own a car, according to AAA.
This year, basic photojournalism students at the University of Montana embarked on a project to photograph Montanans earning from $5.15 to around $6.15 per hour. By exploring the lives and opinions of those directly affected by the initiative, the students hoped to use their newfound journalistic skills to look more deeply into the issue of the minimum wage initiative itself. Should the minimum wage be raised? If it is, is $6.15 an hour enough to live on? These pictures let the viewer decide.
Opponents of the ballot initiative argue that the yearly cost of living increases, which are tied to the consumer price index, will make the wages in Montana dependent on national economic trends. Average annual wages in Montana are among the nation's lowest. Montana joins three other western states -- Arizona, Nevada and Colorado -- with ballot measures to raise the minimum wage. 23 states already mandate a wage above the federal level of $5.15.
Brian McDermott, Teacher










