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Anna McClure, Fellow

Anna McClure is a fellow for Family Economic Security at the National Women's Law Center. Anna is a graduate of The George Washington University and Georgetown University Law Center. At Georgetown, Anna served on the boards of the school's chapters of Law Students for Reproductive Justice, Women's Legal Alliance, and the Equal Justice Foundation. During law school, she focused on civil rights issues at various organizations, including the Institute for Public Representation, National Women's Law Center, AARP Foundation Litigation, Advancement Project, and the National Association of the Deaf. Anna is a Washington, D.C. native and loves dogs.

My Take

Raising the Minimum Wage Improves Women’s Retirement Security, Too

Posted by Anna McClure, Fellow | Posted on: July 24, 2012 at 01:08 pm

Raising the minimum wage, as proposed in the Rebuild America Act, would help women in a lot of ways. It would help pull women and their families out of poverty, narrow the wage gap, and strengthen the economy. But it would also help women in another way you might not have thought of – by improving their retirement security.

How is it that raising the minimum wage now would help women years down the line when they retire? For starters, lower earnings mean less money available to set aside for retirement. Increasing the minimum wage would give women a little extra money to save for the future.

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Governor Chafee Signs Rhode Island Minimum Wage Increase

Posted by Anna McClure, Fellow | Posted on: June 22, 2012 at 11:28 am

It’s always nice to start the weekend off with a bit of good news. Starting next year, Rhode Island minimum wage workers will get a small raise. Governor Lincoln Chafee has signed a bill that would raise the minimum wage to $7.75 per hour in the state, a 35 cent per hour increase.

As I mentioned previously, this increase falls well short of what is needed, but it’s good to see a state taking a step in the right direction. There are minimum wage bills pending in several other states – New York, New Jersey, Illinois and Massachusetts– that would do much more for minimum wage workers, the majority of whom are women, but Rhode Island is the only state to enact an increase so far this year.  So, thank you to Governor Chafee and the Rhode Island legislature for recognizing that minimum wage workers deserve a raise!

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Rhode Island Legislature Passes Minimum Wage Increase

Posted by Anna McClure, Fellow | Posted on: June 14, 2012 at 10:45 am

There’s some positive news on the state minimum wage front. The Rhode Island legislature has passed a bill to raise the minimum wage in the state from $7.40 to $7.75. While 35 cents an hour falls short of the raise that’s needed, as the chairwoman of the House Labor Committee rightly points out, every little bit helps.

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CEO Pay Keeps Going Up, But What About the Minimum Wage?

Posted by | Posted on: May 25, 2012 at 01:45 pm

Today brings news that CEO pay went up last year by 6 percent, bringing the average salary to $9.6 million per year for the head of a public company. Meanwhile, the federal minimum wage remains stuck at $7.25 per hour just $14,500 for a year of full-time, minimum wage work. As our recent infographic makes clear, with women underrepresented at the top and overrepresented at the bottom of the income scale, increasing the minimum wage is critical to women:

It's time to raise the minimum wage.

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State Minimum Wage Update: Illinois Senate Executive Committee to Vote on Minimum Wage Increase

Posted by Anna McClure, Fellow | Posted on: May 08, 2012 at 04:57 pm

Yesterday we told you about several states in which efforts are underway to raise the minimum wage. Today’s update comes from Illinois, where the Senate Executive Committee will vote next week on a bill that would give minimum wage workers a substantial boost in pay. Nearly six in ten minimum wage workers in Illinois are women.

The Illinois bill (S.B. 1565) would gradually raise the minimum wage from its current level of $8.25 per hour to its estimated historic high, which would be $10.65 per hour, and then index the minimum wage to keep pace with inflation. S.B. 1565 also would eliminate the tipped minimum cash wage of $4.95 per hour, making tipped employees – mostly women – entitled to the same minimum wage as other workers.

Increasing the minimum wage to $10.65 per hour, an estimate of its historic high, would increase a worker’s annual earnings by $4,800 per year – enough to lift a mom with two kids out of poverty. Tipped minimum wage workers will see an even bigger increase of $11,400 per year if the bill becomes law. Since the majority of workers who would get a raise are women, S.B. 1565 could also help narrow the gender wage gap in Illinois; in 2011, the typical Illinois woman working full time was paid just 76 cents for every dollar paid to her male counterpart.

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