The Biden administration on Tuesday moved to end a program that had for decades allowed companies to pay workers with disabilities less than the minimum wage.
The statute, enacted as part of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, has let employers obtain Labor Department certificates authorizing them to pay workers with disabilities less than the federal minimum wage, currently $7.25. The department began a “comprehensive review” of the program last year, and on Tuesday it proposed a rule that would bar new certificates and phase out current certificates over three years.
“This proposal would help ensure that workers with disabilities have access to equal employment opportunities, while reinforcing our fundamental belief that all workers deserve fair competition for their contribution,” Taryn Williams, assistant secretary of labor for disability employment policy, said on a call with reporters.
As of May, about 800 employers held certificates allowing them to pay workers less than minimum wage, affecting roughly 40,000 workers, said Kristin Garcia, deputy administrator of the Labor Department’s wage and hour division.
Those figures reflect a steep decline in employers’ reliance on the program in recent years: The number of workers with disabilities earning less than the minimum wage dropped to 122,000 in 2019 from 296,000 in 2010, according to a report published last year from the Government Accountability Office.
Since 2019, more than half of workers employed under this program earned less than $3.50 an hour, according to the report.
Many disability rights advocates have pushed for years to end the practice, arguing that it perpetuates economic inequality and prevents those with disabilities from affording basic goods without government assistance or other forms of financial support. Several states have banned or restricted the practice.
Certificates allowing employers to pay less than the minimum wage are “inherently based on a deeply flawed, false, ableist notion that disabled workers’ labor and contributions are less valuable than the labor and contributions of their nondisabled peers,” Maria Town, president of the American Association of People With Disabilities, said in a statement. “The ideas on which these certificates are based have no place in our modern society and work force.”
Some parents of adults with disabilities, however, have urged for the program to remain in place, raising concern about a potential loss of work opportunities or Social Security benefits.
Opportunities for workers with disabilities to obtain full minimum wage employment have “dramatically expanded” in recent decades, said Ms. Garcia of the Labor Department. These changes to the employment landscape factored into the department’s conclusion that issuing certificates for pay below the minimum wage was no longer necessary, she said, adding that the proposed rule would increase purchasing power and independence for workers with disabilities.
The department said it would review public comments on the proposal until Jan. 17.
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