Ontario minimum wage to increase today
As of 2023, a total of 935,600 workers earned $17.20 per hour or less in Ontario. Approximately 35% of these workers were in retail trade and 24% in accommodation and food services. With the new rate, Ontario’s new minimum wage will be the second-highest provincial rate in Canada, only trailing behind British Colombia, which has a minimum wage set at $17.40 an hour.
Minister of Labour, Immigration, Training and Skills Development David Piccini explained, “Our government is helping nearly one million workers earn more money for themselves and their families… helping families offset the rising cost of living, so that Ontario continues to be the best place to live, work and raise a family.”
The general increase in the cost of living, particularly with higher rental costs and food prices has continued to create and fuel anxieties among Ontarians trying to get by.
For Candie, “the little increase of .65 [cents] will not prevent more and more people using food banks since food becomes second after paying the rent, electricity, heating” and so on in most cases.
Pertaining to local businesses, Candie would like to see federal and provincial taxes be lowered and remove the red tape to give “businesses additional leverage to invest in the local economy, therefore creating new sustainable employment opportunities.”
The minimum wage is also increasing in four provinces this October 1 as well.
Saskatchewan's minimum wage is going up by a dollar to $15, but it will still be the lowest in Canada, along with Alberta.
In Manitoba, the rate is going up by 50 cents to $15.80, a hike that follows a formula set in provincial law tied to the rate of inflation of the previous calendar year.
And in Prince Edward Island, the minimum wage is increasing by 60 cents to $16, which comes after a 40-cent hike earlier this year.
British Columbia has the highest minimum wage of all the provinces at $17.40, while Nunavut's $19 an hour is the highest across Canada.
The federal minimum wage, which the government says affects some 30,000 employees in the federally regulated private sector, is $17.30 an hour.
With additional files from Canadian Press