Letter
to Members of Congress Urging Minimum Wage Increase
OCTOBER 24, 2006
Dear Members of Congress: We write to you on the eve of the
2006 elections, as leaders of eleven faith communities who have
come together in Churches Uniting in Christ and pledged to
combat racism together in our churches and in our society as the
hallmark of this new relationship. We represent over 25 million
communicants nationwide.
We are grateful that the 109th Congress renewed expiring
provisions of the Voting Rights Act, but we remain deeply
concerned that Congress has failed to address the issue of the
federal minimum wage. It is time to put this important matter of
economic and racial justice in a prominent place in the national
debate and to act upon it when Congress returns after the
elections. Through the millennia prophets have called for
economic justice for all. The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.,
said, There is nothing except shortsightedness to prevent us
from guaranteeing an annual minimum and livable income for
every American family. Pope John Paul II stated, In every
case, a just wage is the concrete means of verifying the justice
of the whole socioeconomic system. Today we add our appeal to
these voices. There is a growing hidden underclass in the
United States today. By keeping the minimum wage as a poverty
wage, Congress compounds this reality that has major impact on
all segments in our society. But poverty disproportionately
affects people of color who, according to a report from the U.S.
Census Bureau, experience a higher rate of poverty in this
country. Indeed, African Americans and Hispanics are nearly
three times as likely to live under the poverty line, and nearly
two times as likely to live under twice the official poverty.
The real value of the minimum wage today is nearly $4.00 less
than it was in 1968. Minimum wage workers today have less buying
power than minimum wage workers did in 1950. At the same time,
Congress clearly recognizes the results of inflation when it
gives itself raise after raise, most recently this summer.
Signed, Bishop Philip R. Cousin, Sr.
Senior Bishop
African Methodist Episcopal Church Bishop George W. Walker,
Sr.
Senior Bishop
African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church The Rev. Dr. Sharon E.
Watkins
General Minister and President
Christian Churches (Disciples of Christ) Bishop William
Graves, Sr.
Senior Bishop
Christian Methodist Episcopal Church The Rev. Mark S. Hanson
Presiding Bishop
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America The Most Rev. Frank T.
Griswold
Presiding Bishop and Primate
Episcopal Church, USA The Rev. Michael Livingston
President
International Community of Churches The Rev. David Wickmann
President, Provincial Elders
Moravian Church Northern Province The Rev. Clifton Kirkpatrick
Stated Clerk of the General Assembly
Presbyterian Church (USA) The Rev. John H. Thomas
General Minister and President
United Church of Christ The Rev. Dr. Larry D. Pickens
General Secretary, Ecumenical Staff Officer
The United Methodist Church |