Lawmakers are looking to make it easier to get overtime, double the amount of family leave that workers can take and boost the minimum wage for up to 400,000 Minnesotans.
On Monday, a House panel approved the sweeping changes, which backers say would make work pay off for Minnesotans struggling with poverty. The bill could be headed for a vote by the full House as early as this week.
But even among the Democrats who control the Legislature, there is some turmoil on how far to take the worker-friendly changes. DFLers in the House and Senate have yet to agree on how much to raise the minimum wage and whether to require overtime pay after 40 hours.
At $6.15 an hour, Minnesota's minimum wage is one of the nation's lowest. Since it lags below the federal standard, most — but not all — workers in the state receive the federal minimum of $7.25 an hour, although some small businesses in the state can pay as little as $5.25 per hour.
Gov. Mark Dayton, as well as most Democrats in the Legislature and some Republicans, believe it is time for the state to raise the wage standard.
"We want people who are working full-time to make enough money that they can support their families ... and achieve the American dream," the governor said in a Star Tribune interview. "We're below the nation. That, to me, is just indefensible."
Amount in doubt
The measure approved in the House committee Monday would slowly raise the minimum wage to $9.50 an hour by 2015. Rep. Ryan Winkler, DFL-Golden Valley, originally proposed $10.55. A Senate measure would raise the minimum wage to $7.75 by 2015.
"Something is going to happen on the minimum wage, I just don't know what the number is," Senate Majority Leader Tom Bakk, DFL-Cook, said last week. He said that he, House Speaker Paul Thissen and Dayton will meet to arrive at a single figure.