Petition Drive Postponed

Yesterday, March 17, 2020, the 15 Now Tacoma Board of Directors (BOD) decided to postpone further gathering of signatures until at least the end of April because of the current pandemic. At the end of April, the BOD will decide how we will continue this campaign. It is possible we may delay any attempt to put Initiative 9 on the 2020 ballot and may go for a 2021 initiative instead.

We are concerned about the health of our volunteers as well as the health of petition signers. Health authorities tell us a person may be infected but show no signs of illness. Such people can pass on the COVID 19 to other, more vulnerable members of society.

We are very grateful to those who have supported Initiative 9 with their spirit and hard work. And we are grateful to everyone who signed our petition, spread the word, or in general worked for the betterment of working people. We have every reason to be proud of ourselves.

We’re not calling it quits. This is only a postponement. We will continue to maintain the website and continue trying to get endorsers for making the minimum wage to be a living wage. Hard times are ahead of us, but we must not allow ourselves to be defeated.

Please take care of yourselves, look after your loved ones and neighbors.

In solidarity,

15 Now Tacoma Board of Directors

Why Tacoma Needs a $15/hour Minimum Wage

Homeless tragedy, low wageBack in 2014, the ORIGINAL 15 Now Tacoma website published a post titled Why Tacoma Needs a $15/hour Minimum Wage. The reasons that post gave for raising the minimum wage are still largely valid, and you might want to check it out after you’ve read this article..

Here are some more recent data:

In 2017, the official poverty rate in Tacoma was 17%, not much changed from 2014. And according to the City of Tacoma’s 2016 Community Needs Assessment Report, 26% of Tacoma’s children still live in poverty.

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How To Win the $15/hr Min Wage Fight

What We Must Do to Win

Four years after our first try to pass a ballot measure raising Tacoma’s minimum wage to $15/hour, we’re in a much better position to succeed. Here’s what we need to do to win:

  1. We will need to craft an initiative proposal that will gain enough voter support to pass. We can use much of the language of the last one, with some changes and improvements. Our initiative writing team members and supporters are working on that now.
  2. We will need to recruit more volunteer activists. A large campaign will require coordinated volunteer activity. Thus, we need to mount an outreach campaign through social media and involvement in community forums. We will reach out via our internet presence and our web page. We will need to organize community forums and debates. We will need to reach out to working class communities, labor union groups, minority communities, religious communities, neighborhood groups, and public events. In these venues, we will seek to recruit greater and greater numbers of volunteer activists. Those volunteer activists will be able to conduct further outreach and gather signatures when we work to qualify the initiative for the 2020 ballot. Later, those volunteer activists will be able to help in our get-out-the-vote (GOTV) efforts.
  3. An important thing we need to do is register people who normally don’t vote or haven’t done so in years. Many, likely most, of those people are low-wage workers. Many are minority, single mothers, even ex-offenders. This sizable layer of Tacoma’s working class may feel so alienated from political activism that they don’t bother to turn out to vote. We need to have a concerted campaign to register these voters, telling them we’re from 15 Now Tacoma, and we intend on giving them a chance to vote themselves a raise. This hard personal doorbelling will give us a chance to educate these low-wage workers. Last time, many employers told their workers that if they passed the 15/hour minimum wage, they may lose their jobs. We need to explain why this is not so. Our organizers need to keep careful records about each visit so we can organize a followup as part of our GOTV campaign when we’ve qualified the initiative. See the article on this site titled “Why Tacoma Needs a 15/hour Minimum Wage.”

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The Video that Frightened the Chamber

This article appeared in the old 15 Now website in 2015. It contains an interesting video. You can see the original article by clicking here.

On May Day, 2015 (05/01/2015), a coalition of trade unionists, community groups, and low-wage workers organized a traditional International Workers Day march and rally. There were many excellent speakers. One such speaker was Mike Ladd, a 15 Now Tacoma volunteer. The crowd enthusiastically received Mike’s speech. Another 15 Now Tacoma volunteer made a video of it and uploaded it to YouTube.

However, the video failed to wow members of the local Chamber of Commerce (CoC). It dawned on the Chamber a few months ago that Tacoma’s low-wage workers meant business about getting a fair wage. They also realized a sizable percentage of Tacoma’s voters support Proposition 1, a ballot initiative that will raise the minimum wage immediately to $15/hour—with NO phase in. Here is the video that the Chamber of Commerce doesn’t want you to see.

The CoC held a meeting to plan a way of sticking a wrench into Prop 1’s spokes. At their meeting, they featured this video to energize the CoC attendees into action. Apparently, Mike’s eloquent demand for justice frightened them out of their wits.

The Chamber’s President and CEO Tom Pierson also began attacking 15 Now Tacoma in the press. He claims that we’re a group of extremist outside agitators threatening Tacoma’s economy. This is a classically crude attempt to distract attention from the real issue—poverty wages. President Pierson would rather focus the discussion on the paranoid delusion that 15 Now Tacoma volunteers are a gaggle of radicals being directed from outside Tacoma.

For example, according to The News Tribune of May 12, 2015, here’s what President Pierson says about us. We’re “an outside group coming in and telling employees and employers what’s best for Tacoma.” Mr. Pierson himself lives outside of Tacoma, and the majority of 15 Now Tacoma volunteers are long-term Tacomans, mostly low-income workers or retired.

We in 15 Now Tacoma march to our own drums, and we don’t take our marching orders from any outside commissariat.

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