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Nova Scotia premier hopes to have a common Atlantic minimum wage as early as next spring

FILE - Nova Scotia's premier says he hopes the Atlantic provinces can land on a common minimum wage as early as next spring - but he maintains the goal will not be $15 an hour. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jonathan Hayward

Nova Scotia’s premier says he hopes the Atlantic provinces can land on a common minimum wage as early as next spring – but he maintains the goal will not be $15 an hour.

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Stephen McNeil says talks are continuing with his fellow Atlantic premiers, and they will also have to find a mechanism to help a common minimum wage keep pace with inflation.

READ MORE: N.B. minimum wage increase ‘too little, much too late’

Nova Scotia’s NDP is calling for a $15 minimum wage – like the one announced by Ontario’s Liberal government – and has introduced a bill that would see the rate gradually implemented over a three-year period.

But McNeil says he believes that would mean fewer hours for workers. He says the province can do more to help lower-income earners through such measures as tax cuts and universal pre-primary.

The premier says a common minimum wage would have the greatest impact in Nova Scotia, which has the region’s lowest. A 15-cent increase on Sunday brought the rate to $11 per hour.

WATCH: Minimum wage workers in Nova paid less than anywhere else in Canada

Newfoundland and Labrador’s minimum wage also went up by 15 cents on Sunday to $11.15, while New Brunswick’s wage went up by a quarter to $11.25.

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Prince Edward Island’s minimum wage remains the highest in Atlantic Canada, increasing by 30 cents to $11.55 per hour.

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