Maine
Maine, Portland minimum wages jump on Jan. 1
Jan. 2—The brand new 12 months brings a present to low-wage employees in Maine.
The state’s minimal wage jumped from $12.75 to $13.80 an hour on Jan. 1, and in Portland, the minimal elevated from $13 to $14 an hour. Minimal wage employees clocking 40 hours every week below the brand new state minimal will earn an additional $42 weekly, and full-time employees within the metropolis will earn an additional $40 every week.
It’s unclear what number of employees this can have an effect on — many companies have already raised hourly wages for a lot of positions to attempt to compete in a labor market by which staffing shortages have made it tough to fill many roles.
However James Myall, an financial coverage analyst for the Maine Middle for Financial Coverage, stated the will increase are essential, even when most Maine employees are already incomes properly above the mandated state minimal, not to mention the federal minimal wage of $7.25 an hour.
The state’s minimal wage relies on a regional measure of the price of residing. The 8.2% state wage improve and $1 an hour improve in Portland will assist minimal wage earners cowl housing, heating, meals and gasoline prices that rose considerably final 12 months as inflation soared to ranges not seen in many years, Myall stated.
The locally-owned Sea Canine Brewing Co. was promoting some jobs Friday on the 2022 state minimal of $12.75 an hour, and that elevated Sunday. However a lot of the firm’s employees have been making greater than that already, stated Emma Downey, supervisor of the Sea Canine Brewing Co.’s pub on Western Avenue in South Portland. Sea Canine Brewing has 11 areas in Maine, New Hampshire and Florida.
Downey stated the corporate had already been growing wages due to the labor scarcity — dishwashers sometimes earn $17 to $18 an hour and cooks $22 to $23 an hour. Most eating places, together with the nationwide chains that Sea Canine competes with, are paying the identical wages and Downey hopes potential employees will favor to take care of a smaller, locally-owned firm than a nationwide chain.
Some employees already making above the state or metropolis minimal will nonetheless get a pay hike this month as a result of their hourly wage will increase when the authorized minimal does.
Michael Zeigler, who works at a Circle Ok in Saco, stated he will get paid $4 an hour greater than the state minimal wage. He stated he is completely satisfied for any minimal wage employees getting a pay hike as a result of rising costs imply it is laborious to make ends meet, even for these incomes greater than the minimal.
However Amanda Tarbox, a cashier at Bob & Mike’s Mini Mart in Saco, stated she thinks growing the minimal wage is unfair to staff who’ve stayed in a single job and labored their means as much as earn larger pay.
“It is unfair to individuals who have been there for some time,” she stated. “I do not make minimal wage, however I labored my means up.”
Tarbox stated that so far as she is aware of, everybody at Bob & Mike’s makes greater than the state minimal. She declined to say what she is paid.
Portland’s minimal wage is larger than the state’s, however that hole has shrunk. Voters in 2020 permitted growing the minimal by a greenback an hour annually, topping out at $15 an hour in 2024.
The Portland minimal may also apply to metropolis employees, metropolis spokesman Mo Puia confirmed Friday. As a result of the minimal wage was set by way of referendum, metropolis authorities is not required to observe it, however Metropolis Corridor is taking that step voluntarily, Puia stated.
Growing “the minimal wage is a kind of issues that has persistently had approval,” stated Myall, the financial coverage analyst.
Metropolis voters in November rejected an effort to extend the minimal wage much more, as much as $18 an hour by 2025.
However Myall stated he thinks that initiative failed as a result of the proposal additionally referred to as for eliminating the “tipped minimal wage,” which permits employers in service business jobs — eating places and bars, as an illustration — to rely a part of an worker’s suggestions towards their hourly wage.
In different phrases, if an worker is meant to make a minimal wage of $13.80, an employer can rely as much as $6.90 an hour of the worker’s suggestions towards assembly that minimal. If the proposal — Query D on the November metropolis poll — had handed, employers would have needed to pay at the very least the total metropolis minimal wage, and staff would nonetheless have been in a position to preserve all their suggestions. Some tipped employees opposed Query D, fearing their suggestions would go down if their minimal base pay went up.
Nonetheless, Myall stated, Maine voters’ backing for elevating minimal wages stays sturdy and is particularly essential at a time when some firms are racking up report income, no matter inflation.
“It is essential that a few of that goes right down to the employees,” he stated.
Some lawmakers in recent times have launched unsuccessful makes an attempt within the Legislature to decrease the minimal wage, arguing that larger labor prices harm Maine companies that compete with these in different states, Myall stated.
Fifteen states observe the federal minimal wage of $7.25 an hour, the place it has been since 2009. That is the longest hole between will increase within the federal minimal wage for the reason that regulation that permits Congress to set the minimal was permitted in 1938.
Maine, and Portland, have among the many highest minimal wages within the nation, in keeping with the latest information from the federal Division of Labor. Washington, D.C., has a minimal wage of $16.10 per hour, Washington state’s is $14.49, Massachusetts’ is $14.25 and California and Connecticut have a $14 per hour mimimum.
Maine
Arrest made in shooting incident stemming from fight at Maine steakhouse
Police say they have made an arrest in connection with a shooting last month that stemmed from a fight that broke out at a steakhouse in South Portland, Maine, last month.
South Portland police said 21-year-old Jonathan Hanson, of Buxton, was arrested Wednesday in Buxton. He was one of two suspects in a Dec. 18 incident in the Maine Mall area. The other one, 21-year-old Navinn Ean, of Westbrook, is still at large.
Police said they responded to the Kobe Steakhouse at 380 Gorham Road at 5:13 p.m. that day for a report of a possible shooting in the parking lot. Responding officers learned that a fight had broken out inside the restaurant between two sets of individuals. The altercation moved from inside the restaurant to the parking lot, where a suspect from one of the groups displayed and threatened people in the other group with a handgun.
The victims were able to flee in a vehicle, but they were followed by the suspect in another vehicle. When both vehicles reached the intersection of Gorham Road and Western Avenue, the suspect allegedly fired the gun in the direction of the victim’s vehicle. The vehicle was struck by gunfire, and the suspect then fled onto Western Avenue.
No one was injured in the incident, police said.
South Portland police said their investigation led them to believe the vehicle used in the crime, a blue Dodge Charger, was located at an address in Naples. A search warrant for the property was issued, and the vehicle was impounded as evidence. The suspects were not present, however.
On Tuesday night, Buxton police attempted to make a traffic stop on a pickup truck, but the driver sped off in what appeared to be an attempt to avoid contact with police.
Buxton police later located the vehicle in a driveway on Haines Meadow Road, an address with ties to the South Portland shooting suspects. As officers were getting ready to enter the home, they used a loudspeaker system in an attempt to make contact with Hanson, who they believed to be inside. He eventually came out and was arrested around 11:30 p.m.
Hanson was taken to Cumberland County Jail and faces charges of reckless conduct with a dangerous weapon, criminal threatening with a dangerous weapon, criminal mischief and terrorizing. He was arraigned Wednesday and bail was set at $10,000 cash.
Maine
The secret plan to save Maine’s iconic red hot dogs after federal dye ban
Maine’s last red snapper maker is changing the recipe for its iconic hot dogs after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration banned a key dye the company uses to give the sausages their distinctive color.
The FDA is banning the use of red dye No. 3 in foods, drinks and medications. The synthetic dye is often used to give products a bright, cherry-red color and was linked more than 30 years ago to cancer in animals.
In November 2022, roughly two dozen advocacy organizations and individuals filed a petition to ban the dye, according to the FDA.
W.A. Bean & Sons, the lone remaining Maine-based company that makes the bright hot dogs often called “red snappers,” uses red dye No. 3 along with red dye No. 40 and yellow dye No. 6, according to the package.
The company expected the FDA to eventually ban the ingredient, said Sean Smith, W.A. Bean & Sons’ sales director. Because of this, the business has been exploring ways to make red snappers without the artificial additive while keeping the color and taste identical, Smith said.
“We’ve done test batches already and we expect to have something ready very soon,” Smith said. “We’ve survived multiple world wars and depressions and our red hot dogs aren’t going anywhere.”
Smith declined to share further details on how the secret recipe for red hot dogs will change.
The FDA’s ban comes at a time when W.A. Bean & Sons is seeing sales of the iconic red snappers soar. The company now makes an estimated 650,000 to 700,000 pounds of red dogs annually, compared with the 400,000 pounds they made a decade ago, Smith previously told the Bangor Daily News.
The hot dogs are often called “red snappers” due to the thick casing that gives the sausages their distinctive “snap” when you bite into them. The product has joined the ranks of blueberries, lobster and whoopie pies as an iconic Maine food, despite other states having hot dogs with a similar hue or snappy consistency.
Food manufacturers have until Jan. 15, 2027, to stop using red dye No. 3 in products while drug manufacturers have until Jan. 18, 2028, according to the FDA. Other countries that allow the ingredient will have to comply with FDA rules if products are imported to the U.S.
W.A. Bean & Sons’ foresight is good news for Simones’ Hot Dog Stand in Lewiston, where red snappers have been a top-selling item throughout its 117-year history, according to owner Jim Simones.
“We’ve been in business since 1908 and we’re synonymous with the red dogs,” Simones said. “We sell beef dogs too, but red dogs are the most popular.”
When tourists stumble upon red hot dogs at Simones’ stand, they often question what gives them their glaring reddish-pink color. But, once customers try them, they usually find they like the sausages, Simones said.
“I tell them they’re just like our lobsters — when we put them in boiling water, they turn red,” Simones said.
Simones was pleased to hear W.A. Bean & Sons is finalizing a red hot dog recipe that doesn’t use the outlawed dye but will keep the product’s color the same.
“It’s unique to Maine,” he said of the snappers. “You can’t lose that red.”
Maine
Members of Maine delegation welcome Israel-Hamas ceasefire agreement
Members of Maine’s congressional delegation welcomed news of a ceasefire agreement in the Israel-Hamas war Wednesday, saying it’s a good first step that will bring hostages home and end the conflict, at least temporarily.
President Joe Biden and other officials announced Wednesday that the two sides have reached a 42-day agreement that includes the release of hostages and Israeli forces withdrawing from more populated areas in Gaza.
The agreement, which is not finalized, is likely to offer respite from a conflict that began in October 2023 and has resulted in the deaths of an estimated 47,000 Palestinians and 2,000 Israelis.
“Today’s ceasefire and hostage agreement is a welcome announcement. … While there is much about the agreement and the future that we do not yet know, what we do know is that the tragedy of October 7 can never be allowed to occur again,” Republican Sen. Susan Collins of Maine said, emphasizing her support for Israel in the statement emailed by her office.
Rep. Jared Golden, D-2nd District, said in a statement Wednesday that the first stage of the agreement calls for an immediate ceasefire, a surge of aid to Gaza and the release of 33 women, children and elderly currently held hostage by Hamas.
Golden said those are all “good first steps.”
“I look forward to the implementation of a final agreement that ensures that all remaining hostages are returned home to their families and that Hamas lays down the weapons it took up when it started this conflict,” he said. “If Hamas abides by the terms of such an agreement, I believe there can be a path towards a more lasting peace in the region.”
Rep. Chellie Pingree, D-1st District, also was relieved to hear of the agreement.
“This could not have been achieved without tireless diplomatic efforts to bring both parties to the table, and I am grateful the Biden Administration got this agreement across the finish line before leaving office,” Pingree said in a statement.
“There is still a lot of uncertainty; the Israeli Cabinet needs to approve the deal, hostages need to be released, and humanitarian aid needs to pour into Gaza. I remain cautiously optimistic, but this is a promising step forward.”
This story will be updated.
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