Campaign for a living wage comes to Mangere Bridge
PRESS RELEASE
The campaign for a living wage comes to Mangere Bridge this Saturday, with a picnic to raise the minimum wage and reduce inequality in New Zealand.
Green Party CoLeader Metiria Turei and Unite
Union organiser Rima Taraia will speak at the Pasifika
Greens Picnic for a $15 Minimum Wage this Saturday The picnic – from 12.30pm to 3.30pm
- promotes both organisations’ goal to raise the minimum
wage. There will be a sausage sizzle and games. Unite
hopes to collect enough petition signatures (300,000 plus)
to hold a Citizens Initiated Referendum. Voters would decide
whether the minimum wage should be raised to $15. To achieve
their goal Unite is working with many organisations
including Pasifika Greens. Joe Carolan, campaign organiser
for Unite, says: “We’re running this campaign because we
believe New Zealanders deserve a living wage. The current
minimum wage of $12.50 is too low to survive on in many of
our cities. “We have already collected many thousands of
signatures. This picnic is a chance to celebrate and inform
Manukau City residents about the campaign.” Metiria
Turei says the Green Party is proud to support Unite’s
campaign for a $15 min/wage as it will benefit the poorest
in our society. “New Zealand is one of the most unequal
societies in the developed world. Ground-breaking research
this year has shown that many social problems such as
ill-health, violence, drugs, obesity and mental illness are
worse in unequal societies – we need to share our wealth
around more fairly.
“Having been a single mother on the
benefit I know what it is like to struggle to survive on
little money. This campaign helps those who need it
most.” Unite’s petition asks: “Should the adult
minimum wage be raised in steps over the next three years,
starting with an immediate rise to $15 per hour, until it
reaches 66 percent of the average total hourly earnings as
defined in the Quarterly Employment
Survey?”
ENDS