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News / Business

Small Oregon businesses wary of wage law impact

By Associated Press
Published: June 27, 2016, 4:18pm

CORVALLIS, Ore. — Small business owners in Oregon say they are worried about how the first of a series of minimum wage increases will affect both their profits and their employees.

Oregon’s minimum wage on Friday jumps from $9.25 an hour to $9.75 in Oregon counties with a mix of urban and rural areas. It is the first of seven annual increases that will raise the minimum wage to $13.50 in the summer of 2022 in mixed areas, $14.75 in Portland and $12.50 in nonurban areas.

In Benton County, owners of restaurants, farms, retail establishments and nonprofits say the increased labor cost will be hard for their businesses, the Corvallis Gazette-Times reported.

“It’s going to impact us a lot. Half of our employees are minimum-wage folks,” said Kaymarie Novak, business manager of Novak’s Hungarian Restaurant in downtown Albany.

Janet Steele, executive director of the Albany Area Chamber of Commerce, said it’s possible the increased labor costs will be passed on to customers with meals, products and services coming with a higher price tag. If the price of flour, milk and eggs increases, the price of bread will increase by the sum of those ingredient’s increases.

While retail businesses can increase the price to compensate, Denver Pugh of Pugh Seed Farm near Shedd said agriculture is not left with much of a choice. His farm has no control over its two biggest expenses, and if he tries to raise the price, customers may just buy elsewhere.

In terms of employment, the Oregon office of Economic Analysis reported that there are expected to be 40,000 fewer jobs by 2025 than would have been created without the minimum wage legislation. According the report, the office is not predicting job losses, but rather a slower period of job growth.

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