Home Breadcrumb caret Economy Breadcrumb caret Economic Indicators Raise minimum wage to $14, say students Ontario student unions are joining anti-poverty, labour and community organizations in calling on the provincial government to increase the minimum wage to $14 per hour. By Staff | November 15, 2013 | Last updated on November 15, 2013 2 min read Ontario student unions are joining anti-poverty, labour and community organizations in calling on the provincial government to increase the minimum wage to $14 per hour. “Coupled with high tuition fees, low wages make it increasingly difficult for students and their families to pay for post-secondary education,” said Alastair Woods, chairperson of the Canadian Federation of Students-Ontario. “Raising the minimum wage and reducing tuition fees would help ensure no student is forced to decide between paying tuition fees and buying groceries.” Read: Making tuition tax credits fairer Youth under the age of 25 account for 60% of all minimum wage workers, research from Statistics Canada shows. Many of these minimum wage workers are also students: 85% of minimum wage workers aged 15 to 19 and 44% of minimum wage workers aged 20 to 24 are in school. Twenty years ago, a student would only need to work at minimum wage 35 hours a week for 9 weeks to make enough money for tuition fees for one year. Today, a student would have to work more than 20 weeks, more weeks than an entire summer. Read: McDonald’s employee budget ignores food, heat, reality “Ontario students and youth are facing unprecedented levels of student debt and a bleak job market after graduation,” said Woods. “By increasing the minimum wage to $14 per hour, the government could immediately improve the lives of students and youth.” Students made a series of recommendations to the Ontario Minimum Wage Advisory Panel including increasing the minimum wage to $14 per hour, indexing the minimum wage to the Consumer Price Index, eliminating tiered wages and ending unpaid internships. Read: Ontario businesses want minimum wage fairness Staff The staff of Advisor.ca have been covering news for financial advisors since 1998. Save Stroke 1 Print Group 8 Share LI logo