{
	"type": "rich",
	"version": "1.0",
	"provider_name": "Action Network",
	"provider_url": "https://actionnetwork.org",
	
	"html": "<link href='https://actionnetwork.org/css/style-embed-v3.css' rel='stylesheet' type='text/css' /><script src='https://actionnetwork.org/widgets/v6/petition/raise-the-wage-3?format=js&source=widget'></script><div id='can-petition-area-raise-the-wage-3' style='width: 100%'><!-- this div is the target for our HTML insertion --></div>",
	"author_name": "Progress America",
	"author_url": "https://actionnetwork.org/groups/progress-america",
	"title": "BECOME A CO-SIGNER OF THE “RAISE THE WAGE ACT OF 2019.”",
	"thumbnail_url": "https://actionnetwork.org//images/generic_facebook.jpg",
	"description": "The federal minimum wage has not received an increase in nearly a decade. And at $7.25 per hour, it is now more than 25 percent below where it was in real terms half a century ago. In 2017, the Economic Policy Institute estimated that raising the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour would directly or indirectly lift the wages of 41.5 million working people―29.2 percent of the wage-earning workforce. This will generate $144 billion in additional income for families who need it most, including 23.1 million women and 4.5 million single parents. Join our champions in Congress and become a co-signer of the “Raise the Wage Act of 2019” to raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2024. But there’s more! After phasing in the minimum wage increase to $15 by 2024, the bill would then index the minimum wage to match changes in the national median wage, and would phase out the “tipped minimum wage” of $2.13 per hour. EPI research shows that tipped minimum wage workers are better off in cities and states where they are paid the full minimum wage—and the restaurant industry in those places continues to thrive. Fight for $15 striker Tiffany Lowe from Memphis, Tennessee said at the introduction of the bill in Washington, DC: &quot;Today, I am joined by underpaid workers from across the country to say that everyone who works—no matter where they’re from —everyone deserves to be paid enough to lead a decent life and provide for their family. It was unbelievable six years ago that 200 fast food workers in New York would walk off the job for $15 and a union and walk back into their shops. Now the demand for $15 has grown into an undeniable movement of underpaid workers. By sticking together and acting like a union, workers in the Fight for $15 completely changed what’s possible, and made $15 an hour the new baseline for decent pay in America. &quot;No matter where we live, no matter our race, religion, or background, we are ALL worth more.&quot;",
	"url": "https://actionnetwork.org/petitions/raise-the-wage-3"
}

