Posted on 03/02/2014 9:23:25 AM PST by Kaslin
If youve ever wondered how the United States got in to its current mess of a stagnant economy and out-of-control government, I have a suggestion. Take a good look at what a handful of voters in one of Americas finer suburbs did to themselves and the rest of their community, and realize that it is a microcosm for whats happening all across the country.
The city in question is Seatac, a small suburb in the state of Washington (its name is derived from the larger neighboring cities of Seattle and Tacoma). Last year a group of activists there were frustrated with the preponderance of low paying entry-level service industry jobs, so they did what seemed only logical: they collected enough signatures on petitions to launch a ballot initiative that, if passed, would require a minimum wage of $15.00 per hour.
The city was soon flooded with cute campaign signs. Featuring the silhouetted image of a young child tossing a toy glider in to the air as the glider pointed upwards, the slogan read, vote YES for proposition 1 and watch our economy take off!
Unionized workers at the Seattle Tacoma (frequently abbreviated SEA-TAC) International Airport and at nearby hotels and restaurants took to the streets urging passage of the initiative. And while the margin of victory was so slim that the election results werent certified until three weeks after Election Day, on November 26th proposition 1 was declared the law of land.
The Huffington Post called it historic. CNN Money said business owners had been stung. The true believers in big government declared it a harbinger of things to come, and celebrated the new wealth that would be theirs once the new wage requirement took hold on January 1 of 2014.
But then suddenly the rule of law got in the way of the liberal progressive agenda. A court challenge quickly ensued and a county judge determined that, for a couple of very good reasons, the new minimum wage requirement wouldnt apply to many of the workers who had campaigned for it.
For one, the employees at SEA-TAC airport wouldnt see a wage increase because SEA-TAC airport is owned and operated by the city of Seattle. While the city of Seatac is adjacent to Seattle and the name of the city of Seatac and the abbreviated name of the SEA-TAC airport are pronounced the same, the laws of the city of Seatac dont have jurisdiction in the city of Seattle so the passage of proposition 1 had no impact on the wages paid to Seattle city employees.
Secondly, the judge ruled that even within the city of Seatac the new minimum wage requirement wouldnt apply to unionized workers. When members of a labor union agree to a labor contract with their employer, the terms of the contract are legally binding for both the workers and the employer. The government, so the judge ruled, has no right to arbitrarily impose a law that would change the terms of the contract that private parties (the workers and the employer) had already put in place. Thus unionized hotel and restaurant workers would continue to earn their less-than-$15.00 per hour wage for the duration of their union contract, despite all their tireless efforts to turn out the vote.
The frustration didnt begin and end with unionized workers and airport staffers. Many non-unionized workers in the city of Seatac were disappointed to learn that the new law only applied to businesses of certain staffing sizes smaller companies with few employees didnt have to comply. Even so, small business owners in Seatac are still feeling the pain of workers resigning to take higher-paying jobs with bigger companies.
Interestingly, a tiny portion of the citys population created the chaos that has engulfed all of Seatac. With a citywide population of 27, 667, less than fifty percent of the residents 12, 108 are registered voters. Among them, only 6, 003 people actually cared enough to vote, and Proposition 1 passed with only a 77 vote margin.
In an era where members of Congress vote on unread bills and the President signs them in to law, it stands to reason that workers, union leaders and private residents could pass a ballot initiative without understanding the most basic things about the initiatives limitations, implications and jurisdictions. We live at a time when Americans are far more interested in sports scores and reports of Justin Biebers latest arrest, than they are interested in the inner-workings of their government and the economy, or even the history of their own country.
Such foolishness causes uncertainty for businesses, and uncertainty kills jobs. Until Americans care enough to start reading the fine print again, conditions arent likely to get much better.
Ever look at a Red (Republican)/ Blue (Democrat) voting map from last year. The Blue Democrats from the big cities gave us this horribly corrupting government.
Maybe Caliph Baraq could enforce the big min wage with an Exec Order?
Aren’t airports mostly funded with federal dollars?
Do it “for the chillern”
Low information voters (’fools’) serve up a bad and evil America.
Oh, those unintended consequences.
I think in addition to low information should be gullible.
We’re in the era of the dictatorship of the proletariat.
(Don’t need no stinking laws.)
IMHO
So they vote for representatives who do not read the bills they vote on...or the constitution.
I expected this to be a story about job flight from the jurisdiction that passed the ridiculous law, but the consequences were even better than I imagined.
The most fun thing to watch will be the collapse of Seatac’s economy. Eventually followed by the city being turned into one large open park.
To cover the legally binding $ 15.00 an hour minimum wage those affected businesses inside Seatac’s city limits will have to raise their prices and/or reduce their work force.
Shortly, you will see businesses open for business on one side of the city’s boundaries and closed on the other.
Then, you will see the costs of living inside Seatac go up as the city government has to expand city licensing fees and raise property taxes.
Finally, you will see people moving out to places where they can afford to live.
Then, to cut the cost of governing, the city will declare most homes abandoned and then bulldoze them down to the bear earth.
Think this will not happen? Can you say Detroit?
Like it or not, the economic reality of this vote has the high probability of turning Seatac into a mini-Detroit. The only question is will the proponents of this bill leave before or after that happens.
No different than having the 2nd. and 3rd. stringers on a football team able to vote themselves as starters. The team will most likely go on a prolonged losing streak.
“Until Americans care enough to start reading the fine print again, conditions arent likely to get much better.”
Yeah. Good luck with that. Due to 50+ years of ‘Why Johnny Can’t Read’ thanks to the Dems OWNING the Publik Skrool System, we are doomed.
SeaTac is already a dump. An adjacent town, Tukwila, has the highest crime rate in the state and is a dumping ground for unassimilable immigrants on welfare.
The picture has some delicious irony. The big green hand of “gimmedat” is outstretched to collect the goodies.
That map is encouraging and disheartening at the same time. So many are being held captive by a vocal few. If only a strong conservative voice could break the media barrier.
Low information voters, or ignorant voters, as I call them serve up a bad and evil USA
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.