10/31/2019| by Will Maddox
The new
minimum wage at all Medical City Facilities is $13/hour, nearly double the
federal minimum wage of $7.25/hour. The wage increase will apply to more than
500 employees across the system. The wage increase accompanies other
retention benefits that include tuition reimbursement, nursing school support,
and loan repayment programs.
“This
wage increase reflects our commitment to recruit and retain the very best
talent,” says Erol Akdamar, president of Medical City Healthcare via release.
“Helping to ensure that our colleagues are financially stable contributes to
the high quality care they provide to our patients.”
The
battle to retain talent is fierce in Texas, with the unemployment rate at just
3 percent. The tight competition for workers means industries with minimum wage
employees are having trouble keeping them, with greener pastures around every
corner. Medical City’s minimum wage move will increase their wages by 79
percent.
The
move follows Dallas County and City of Dallas moves to increase minimum wage to
$15/hour for the city and county employees earlier this year. Dallas is one of
many municipalities that have done so, as the national minimum wage has not
been raised in more than a decade.
Opponents
of raising the minimum wage say that it could cause business closures or
layoffs. But in New York City, where all businesses with more than 10 people
have to pay their employees $15/hour, revenue and employment have gone up since the change, despite the
increased prices.
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