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Nova Scotia Liberals, NDP spar over $15 minimum wage

A push from the Nova Scotia NDP for the introduction of $15 an hour minimum wage was avoided by Premier Stephen McNeil in question period on Wednesday – Oct 18, 2017

A push from the Nova Scotia NDP for the introduction of $15 an hour minimum wage was avoided by Premier Stephen McNeil in question period on Wednesday.

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NDP leader Gary Burrill pushed the premier to answer questions on the topic after the party tabled a bill earlier in the day.

“In B.C., Ontario and Alberta they are all moving towards $15,” said Burrill.

“We have one of the highest paid premiers in Canada and this premier is leading a province which has the lowest wage for low-paid workers. Does the Premier see a problem with that?”

READ MORE: Nova Scotia heads to international job fairs in attempt to draw more doctors to the province

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Burrill was alluding to the fact that as of Oct. 1, 2017, inexperienced workers in the province are paid $10.35 an hour, the lowest in the country, while experienced workers are paid $10.85.

McNeil, instead, countered by saying that all Nova Scotians are better off “since they voted the NDP out of power.”

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After question period the Liberal government confirmed they wouldn’t be raising the minimum wage.

WATCH: Nova Scotia Liberals nix NDP push for rent control

“With our economy, to move to a $15 minimum wage, where you’re essentially forcing a small business to pay an entry-level worker, $32,000 a year full time would have a devastating effect,” said Labi Kousoulis, Minister for Labour and Advanced Education.

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Instead, Kousoulis revealed his department has begun to study a new two-tier model where a company with 26 employees or more would have to pay a different minimum wage than those with fewer than 26 workers.

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