© 2024 St. Louis Public Radio
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Missouri And Illinois Set To Increase Minimum Wage In 2021

Now hiring signs can be found at several fast food and small businesses through out the St. Louis region as the minimum wage is set to increase January 1, 2021.
Derik Holtmann
/
Belleville News-Democrat Illustration
"Now hiring" signs can be found at several fast-food places and small businesses throughout the St. Louis region as the minimum wage is set to increase on Jan. 1.

Editor’s note: This story was originally published by the Belleville News-Democrat, a news partner of St. Louis Public Radio.

Minimum wage workers in Illinois will earn another dollar per hour, and those in Missouri will earn 85 cents per hour more starting Jan. 1, but businesses already struggling with pandemic problems worry about how the increased cost will affect their bottom line.

Under a law signed by Gov. J.B. Pritzker in February 2019, the minimum wage in Illinois increased in 2020 from $8.25 to $9.25 in January and then to $10 in July. This New Year, it will go up to $11.

The wage will increase by $1 each New Year until 2025 when it reaches $15 per hour. Before 2020, Illinois hadn’t seen a minimum wage increase since 2010 when it increased to $8.25.

Missouri’s minimum wage increased to $9.45 an hour at the beginning of 2020 as part of a five-year series of raises voters approved by a wide margin in 2018. The minimum wage will increase each year until it hits $12 an hour in 2023. For 2021, it will be $10.30.

When asked if Illinois had considered suspending the minimum wage increase because of the pandemic’s effect on small businesses, Pritzker’s answer was succinct.

“No,” Pritzker said at a news conference in Chicago recently. “We have a very long path, longer than some would have liked, for the raise in the minimum wage. ... This economy is going to recover, and we want, particularly people who are working at the lowest wages in our economy, the poorest working people in Illinois, we think that they deserve a raise.”

The increase is a necessary step toward “a decent standard of living,” said Steven Powell, president of the United Food and Commercial Workers Local 881. The union represents employees of grocery stores such as Schnucks, among other retailers and workers in other industries.

“The pandemic has revealed that many low wage workers are, in fact, essential to fulfilling the vital needs of our communities. Almost overnight, many folks that previously had been taken for granted like grocery cashiers, pharmacy techs, and food production workers were praised for their heroic efforts during the public health crisis,” Powell said in a written statement to the Belleville News-Democrat. “What has been made crystal clear is although they are now classified as essential, their paychecks do very little to reflect that designation.”

The increases next year are expected to boost the earnings of up to 400,000 adult hourly workers in Illinois and 200,000 in Missouri, said Frank Manzo IV, policy director for the Illinois Economic Policy Institute.

“In many ways, raising the minimum wage can be seen first as hazard pay for face-to-face workers,” he said. “Then when the pandemic subsides as a kind of thank you for providing goods and services to the public during these difficult times.”

Increasing the minimum wage can be a way to encourage more people to enter the workforce, after a year when many companies cut jobs because of the pandemic, Manzo said. He added that paying minimum wage workers more could be effective in fostering economic recovery from the coronavirus.

“When those workers have greater purchasing power, they spend it back in the economy,” Manzo said. “That helps create a stimulus effect that will help grow the economy in ways that ensure more broad-based economic prosperity.”

Small businesses will have to make adjustments, whether it’s changing workers’ hours or passing along the cost to customers.

Cory Flament owns Flamentco’s The Place Pizza with locations in O’Fallon, Illinois, and downtown St. Louis. Flament supports the minimum wage increase for his employees, but said it will cause some financial stress. His downtown location is already suffering from reduced foot traffic.

“We’re doing the best we can. We still have the lights on, still serving pizza every day,” Flament said. “We’re proud to be part of the advancement of wages, but at the same time it’s going to take some definite buckling down and making it happen.”

While his business has had a chance to grow and stabilize over the five years since he founded it, Flament says he worries about entrepreneurs who are just starting out. An increase in the minimum wage could be even harder on them, he said.

“It’s definitely a challenge when you’re going through a situation like a pandemic and trying to figure out how your business is going to survive, and then there’s a new mandated minimum wage,” Flament said.

In July, the Illinois Chamber of Commerce called on the legislature to put a hold on implementing minimum wage hikes during the pandemic, but lawmakers never took up the effort.

It’s all the same to Justin McLaughlin, who owns The Lory Theater in Highland with his wife. It's been closed since March, and they have no exact idea of when they’ll be able to reopen at full capacity.

“What I care about is am I going to survive COVID. I need to be able to have a business to be able to care about the minimum wage law,” McLaughlin said. “The minimum wage is a little bit of a side note, a secondary bridge. I would love to cross that bridge. I would love to have the opportunity to complain about minimum wage going up.”

The Lory Theater has survived thus far thanks to federal stimulus money and help from the owners’ hometown bank, and McLaughlin hopes movie theaters will receive another round of COVID assistance from the $900 billion package Congress passed this week.

The minimum wage increase is still likely to be a problem if and when the theater does reopen. Before the pandemic, the theater was a “month to month, barely making it” type of business, McLaughlin said.

The owners hope to start another business, possibly a family entertainment venue, to help support the theater. But both businesses rely on a successful, effective vaccine.

“Surviving COVID? At this point that’s all that matters,” McLaughlin said.

Eric Schmid contributed reporting.

Kelsey Landis is a reporter with the Belleville News-Democrat, a news partner of St. Louis Public Radio.

Kelsey Landis is an Illinois state affairs and politics reporter for the Belleville News-Democrat, a news partner of St. Louis Public Radio.