Ahead of a decisive meeting, the Metropolitan Airports Commission appears set to raise the minimum wage at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport to $10 an hour, a step that would leave neither side satisfied in a roiling debate over what to pay low-wage employees of airline subcontractors.
MAC Chief Executive Jeff Hamiel recommended in a memo that commissioners at a meeting next Monday set a minimum wage for airport workers that is $1 an hour higher than the state minimum wage.
That means the pay floor at the airport would be $10 an hour on Aug. 1, when the Minnesota minimum wage rises to $9, and $10.50 an hour in August 2016, when the state wage rises again.
About 2,800 airport workers would be covered by the requirement. Workers say the increase is not enough, while airlines say no difference from the state level is justified.
The Service Employees International Union, which has been pushing the MAC for a $15-an-hour pay floor at the airport, is urging a no vote to Hamiel's recommendation. It also noted that about 300 rental car workers will not be eligible.
"It's better than nothing, but I don't think it is a living wage," said Misrak Anbesse, a wheelchair assistant who has worked at the airport since 2009. "We have to organize ourselves and work more."
She said too many employees of airline subcontractors must work two jobs, and share housing with other people in order to make ends meet.
Abdi Ali, who has worked at the airport since 2007, said he also was hoping for more. "We were demanding $15, but if they had gone to $12 I would have said, 'OK, that's something,'" Ali said.