Showing posts with label Special Report. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Special Report. Show all posts

Thursday, April 21, 2016

Raising New Jersey’s Minimum Wage to $15 an Hour Would Boost a Large and Diverse Group of Working Men and Women




People who are working full-time in New Jersey should be able to afford a decent place to live.

They should be able to buy food without having to rely on government safety net programs or private charity. And they should be able to afford clothes for themselves and their family.

But today, with the minimum wage at $8.38 an hour, that's just not the case.

As New Jersey policymakers consider raising the state's minimum wage to $15 an hour, a new NJPP report details just who would benefit from such a boost - and it's not who you might think.

Raising the minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2021 would directly boost the pay of about 1 in 4 Garden State workers, or 975,000 men and women.

The wage increase would help a diverse group of workers who currently aren't paid enough to make ends meet, improving their chances of getting by - and, often, providing for their families - in high-cost New Jersey.

The report's top findings:


  • Nearly all workers who would benefit are adults: 91% of the affected workers are adults 20 years old or older. Just 9% are teenagers.
  • Most workers who would benefit are working full time: 61% of the affected workers work 35 hours a week or more; an additional 27% work between 20 and 34 hours a week. Only 12% are working part time jobs at less than 20 hours a week.
  • Many workers who would benefit are parents: 28% of the affected workers are parents, and more than 1 in 5 New Jersey children (21%) have at least one parent who would benefit.
Raising the minimum wage will not only boost these workers, it will help boost New Jersey's economy, since these working men and women will spend the increased wages immediately and locally on pressing needs.

That's why, hand in hand with partners across the state and inside the Statehouse, NJPP is working hard to ensure that more of New Jersey's working men and women can start to make ends meet and begin to climb the ladder into the middle class.


Monday, September 8, 2008

UPDATE: Inflammatory Breast Cancer (IBC)

I received the following comment to my blog post about Inflammatory Breast Cancer (IBC) last night and I thought that I I should share it with you.

"Thank you Mike for keeping this story going. Every man woman and child needs to know about this devastating breast cancer.
Sadly, in the first video my daughter Kristine (Tina) lost her battle on August 29, 2007. In the second video Deena lost her battle just 4 months before Tina. They are our angels now, watching to make sure we keep spreading the word, there is a breast cancer without a lump, and mammograms rarely see it."

Patti Bradfield, President
The Inflammatory Breast Cancer Foundation


Patti,
I am deeply sorry for your loss.
The good Lord had a purpose for your daughter, so you can feel comfort in knowing that her death was not in vain, because of her and Deena many more are now aware of this deadly disease.
Several women close to me have either passed away due to breast cancer or have been diagnosed and are living with it so if there is anything else that I can do to make others aware of IBC please let me know and I will pas it along.

All the best

If you haven't seen the Video's about thus deadly disease yet please see my earlier blog post on the subject of IBC

Sunday, September 7, 2008

The Silent Killer: Inflammatory Breast Cancer (IBC)

In a 4 Part series on Inflammatory Breast Cancer(IBC), Komo4 News warns about the dangers and lack on knowledge about this kind of cancer.

Most women have never heard of it, it is rarely detected in a mammogram and a lump does not need to be present. The cancer grows extremely fast and there is no cure for it, many young women are dying from it everyday.

If you are like me and have family members that have died from breast cancer or have been diagnosed with it,then you need to see this special report and inform others to talk with their doctors about it.

Part 1


Part 2


Part 3


Part 4