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Legal Fight Over Miami Beach Minimum Wage Could Have Far Reaching Impacts

Miami Beach is still trying to implement a minimum wage ordinance the city commission passed in 2016. A lower court and an appeals court ruled against the city last year.
www.miamibeachchamber.com
Miami Beach is still trying to implement a minimum wage ordinance the city commission passed in 2016. A lower court and an appeals court ruled against the city last year.
Miami Beach is still trying to implement a minimum wage ordinance the city commission passed in 2016. A lower court and an appeals court ruled against the city last year.
Credit www.miamibeachchamber.com
Miami Beach is still trying to implement a minimum wage ordinance the city commission passed in 2016. A lower court and an appeals court ruled against the city last year.

The City of Miami Beach is in a battle with the state that could impact hundreds of Florida municipalities. It’s about home rule and the city’s ability to set its own policy when it comes to wages.

Florida’s minimum wage is $8.25 an hour. The amount may go up each year based on changes in the Consumer Price Index.

Miami Beach leaders voted two years ago to approve a higher minimum wage than the state.

“In Miami Beach where the cost of living is higher, our work force suffers exponentially higher," says Assistant city attorney Rob Rosenwald. "Miami Beach City Commission decided in 2016 that it was only fair to give a raise to the lowest wage workers in our city.”

A circuit judge overturned the city’s ordinance, and an appeals court agreed the state’s preemption law does not allow the city to set its own minimum wage.

“In 2003, the legislature passed a law that said no local government may have a local minimum wage higher than the federal minimum wage," Rosenwald says. "In immediate response to that, within 60 days, folks had started gathering signatures to pass a constitutional initiative that raised the minimum wage from the federal level and created a statewide minimum wage, and also said that it did not preempt or limit the authority of any other public body to mandate a higher minimum wage.”

So, which rule takes precedence – the 2003 state law or the 2004 constitutional amendment? T he Florida Supreme Court has agreed to take up the case.

Rosenwald says the city has asked the court for a decision by January 1st because workers are overdue for a bigger paycheck. “They were supposed to get a raise to $10.31 an hour starting on January 1st of 2018; and now coming up on January 1st of 2019, they are slated to get an increase to $11.31 an hour.”

Business groups that challenged the legality of the Miami Beach ordinance include the Florida Retail Federation, the Florida Chamber of Commerce, and the Florida Restaurant & Lodging Association. They oppose the additional mandate on local businesses.

If the Florida Supreme Court rules that the 2004 constitutional amendment prevails over the older state law, Kraig Conn, general counsel for the Florida League of Cities, says that would open the door for 67 counties and 412 cities to adopt their own minimum wage ordinances.

CONN: We believe - with the adoption of the constitutional amendment - that had the effect of nullifying the state preemption from 2003.

WFSU: Why did lawmakers feel the need to pass that bill in 2003?

CONN: Some cities and some counties - not a lot - had adopted minimum wage ordinances, living wage ordinances for their own employees. They did not impose these on private employers. However, there were a number of other cities, primarily in California, that had adopted minimum wage or living wage ordinances that applied to private employers. We understood the concern from the Florida Legislature in 2003, (that) even though that issue did not exist in Florida, they wanted to cut the issue off at the knees and not even give it an opportunity for a city or county to adopt an ordinance that would have a minimum wage for private employers.

WFSU: Miami Beach city attorneys recently filed a legal brief asking the Supreme Court to issue a ruling by January 1st...The league signed on to file a friend-of-the-court brief in support. Why did you guys feel like you should sign on as a friend of the court in this case?

CONN: The core foundation of the Florida League of Cities is to protect municipal home rule powers, and that's the power of local decision makers to address local problems.

Next week, we'll hear from a business group fighting the Miami Beach ordinance.

Copyright 2020 WFSU. To see more, visit WFSU.

Gina Jordan is the host of Morning Edition for WFSU News. Gina is a Tallahassee native and graduate of Florida State University. She spent 15 years working in news/talk and country radio in Orlando before becoming a reporter and All Things Considered host for WFSU in 2008. She left after a few years to spend more time with her son, working part-time as the capital reporter/producer for WLRN Public Media in Miami and as a drama teacher at Young Actors Theatre. She also blogged and reported for StateImpact Florida, an NPR education project, and produced podcasts and articles for AVISIAN Publishing. Gina has won awards for features, breaking news coverage, and newscasts from contests including the Associated Press, Green Eyeshade, and Murrow Awards. Gina is on the Florida Associated Press Broadcasters Board of Directors. Gina is thrilled to be back at WFSU! In her free time, she likes to read, travel, and watch her son play football. Follow Gina Jordan on Twitter: @hearyourthought
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