The fallout from Florida passing Amendment 2

by | Nov 4, 2020



Small business owners and workers expressed their concern on Tuesday after Ballot Amendment 2 passed with 61 percent of voters approving the legislation.

Over 6 million Floridians said yes to Amendment 2 on Election Day, raising the minimum wage to $15 by 2026. With its passage, the Sunshine State becomes the eighth in the nation to adopt a $15 minimum wage, joining states like New York, New Jersey, and California.

The amendment will boost the pay to thousands, increasing the state’s current $8.56-an-hour pay floor to $10 starting in 2021. The minimum wage would gradually increase, going up by $1 until it reaches $15 in 2026.

Despite this, pro-business groups argue that the wage hike will destroy the lifeblood of the state.

“Given the devastating impacts COVID-19 has already had on Florida’s economy, we are extremely worried about the job losses and business closures that will accompany this mandate,” said Carol Dover, President & CEO of the Florida Restaurant and Lodging Association, which represents thousands of businesses that will be impacted by the excessive minimum wage hike. “We are proud of our small business owners and employees from across the state who came together to fight this amendment. We have seen too many places across the country that have implemented this wage hike, only to see workers who were promised more money instead lose their jobs altogether. We are worried about our small businesses and the Floridians who will lose their jobs.”

Dover was one of many outspoken opponents fighting back against the initiative spearheaded by millionaire trial lawyer John Morgan. Dover and other business leaders fear the minimum wage hike will put jobs at risk, result in higher costs for consumers, and cause businesses — already on life-support from COVID-19 — to close.

Morgan, however, argues that Floridians will now have a “living wage.”

“We have stood hand in hand with our workers to fight Ballot Amendment 2,” said John Horne a small business owner in Manatee County. “For months, we have tried to educate the public about the negative impacts this would have on our industry and on other jobs across the Sunshine State. The outcome of this election does not change our concerns, but we’ll work with our team and across the industry to keep fighting to stay alive and save as many jobs as we can.”

Morgan reportedly spent more than $5 million of his own money to help bring the measure to a vote.

4 Comments

  1. jamesmejuto2@yahoo.com

    It’s amazing, employers are crying about paying their workers(labor) a
    decent, livable wage, since the worers are the ones who make a profit for
    the business and allow the employer to live a good life, unlike their
    workers.
    The ‘minimum wage’ will go up to $10 come 2021 but yet these parasitic,
    blood-sucking employers complain.

    Do any of them pay medical, vacation or family leave?

  2. FedUpInFL

    I am a small business owner, or as you claim, a “blood-sucking employer.” Yes, I pay medical and provide paid vacation. I have under five employees and with the upcoming new minimum wages, will reduce hours so my employees will be part-time which will reduce their benefits. So you tell me, James…have you ever signed the front of a paycheck or is this all a hypothetical exercise to you?

  3. BruceS

    So increasing wages to the next new minimum of $10/hour 10 months from now in Sept 2021 is going to force you to reduce employee hours? My hunch is that you need those employees in order to keep your business running as it is now, whatever your business is. Reducing their hours will reduce your capacity to meet demand and result in you losing business and income. I would imagine that, being a smart businessperson, you would realize that the new minimum wage is going up for everyone, not just you. You will do the math and realize that it pays to meet the new minimum, keep the business running smoothly, and adjust your prices which is what every other intelligent businessperson is doing across the state economy. Bottom line, you make the same complaint that all the complainers make. Yet time after time in study after study across the country for years now, progressively implemented minimum wage increases have benefited the whole economy – employees and employers alike. And yes, I have signed the front of a paycheck.

  4. Bonnie

    I’m a conservative but I voted yes on this because we can’t keep kicking this can down the road. You can’t rent a studio apartment on $8.50/hr. Where do you expect people to live? When an hours wage doesn’t even buy a hamburger it’s time to raise the wage. Florida’s restaurants weren’t closed very long and you were compensated. We need Trump’s economy again or we are all in trouble.

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