Calls for minimum wage rise as jobholders seek food
Cork charity Penny Dinners, which dishes out up to 2,000 meals a week to the cityâs needy, said it has seen struggling workers in the retail, building, and legal sectors come through its doors seeking a free meal in the last 12 months.
âTwo years ago, we used to see people we didnât know coming through our doors,â said spokeswoman Catriona Twomey. âBut now weâre seeing people we all know, people we knew growing up, people from our neighbourhoods, people who were always alright, financially, but who are now really struggling.â
She said one retail worker is on 30 hours a week â putting him just beyond the threshold for housing assistance payments. And she said when he pays rent, there is little left in his pay packet to survive. âThey canât pay the rent, they canât pay the mortgage, they canât buy fuel â things like that and itâs getting on top of everybody.
âCan you imagine someone thatâs been out working 39 hours a week and not being able to open their fridge or cupboard and have any food in it to eat?â
Her call to increase the minimum wage came as CSO figures showed just over 10% of those participating in the Quarterly National Household Survey earned the minimum wage or less â increased last January by 10c â from âŹ9.15 an hour to âŹ9.25 an hour.
Workerâs Party Cork city councillor, Ted Tynan, said the figures showed many employers are treating the minimum wage as a âstandard rateâ â particularly in relation to young workers.




