Focus on the presidential contest aside, on Election Day, voters in several states approved measures that will impact employers. Namely, Florida employers are now looking at years of incremental increases to the minimum wage, while a slew of other states jumped on the marijuana-legalization bandwagon.
Florida Voters Approve of Gradual Minimum Wage Hikes, to Reach $15 in 2026
Florida voters narrowly approved Constitutional Amendment 2, which gradually increases the Sunshine State's minimum wage from its current $8.56 per hour to $15 per hour over the next six years. All public and private sector employers must adhere to the following minimum wage rate schedule for nontipped employees:
- $8.65 on January 1, 2021;
- $10 on September 30, 2021;
- $11 on September 30, 2022;
- $12 on September 30, 2023;
- $13 on September 30, 2024;
- $14 on September 30, 2025; and
- $15 on September 30, 2026.
As of September 30, 2027, the minimum wage rate will be adjusted annually based on changes to the Consumer Price Index, with the recalculated minimum wage to take effect on January 1 of the following year. Amendment 2 does not change the tip credit employers may credit toward the minimum wage for tipped employees who meet the Fair Labor Standards Act eligibility requirement.
Florida has become the first southern state to pass a $15 minimum wage target, and the first state in the country to do so via a ballot measure.
Five States Pass Marijuana Legalization Measures
While Florida was the only state with a minimum wage hike on the November 3 ballot, voters in five states approved legalized marijuana measures, either medical or recreational:
- In Arizona, 60 percent of voters
supported Proposition 207, which allows adults over the
age of 21 to use and possess up to one ounce of marijuana, and to
grow up to six marijuana plants at a primary residence for personal
use.This comes after a similar measure failed by a narrow margin in
2016.
- Mississippi was the only state
considering just medical, as opposed to recreational, marijuana
use. About 70% of voters approved Initiative
65, which allows qualified patients with certain
debilitating medical conditions to use marijuana products. Qualifying conditions include cancer,
epilepsy, post-traumatic stress disorder, and Parkinson's
disease, among others.
- In Montana, voters passed Initiative 190, which legalizes
the possession and use of up to one ounce of marijuana by persons
over the age of 21.In addition, I-190 allows individuals to grow up
to four marijuana plants and four seedlings in their residence, for
personal use, subject to certain restrictions. Anyone currently
serving a sentence for an act permitted by I-190 can apply for resentencing or
expungement of the conviction.
- In New Jersey, about two-thirds of voters passed a constitutional
amendment legalizing the recreational use of marijuana for
adults age 21 and older, as well as the cultivation, processing,
and sale of retail marijuana.As New Jersey became the first state
in the Mid-Atlantic region to legalize the recreational use of
marijuana, commentators predicted other states in
the region may follow suit.
- South Dakota voters approved Constitutional Amendment A, which legalizes the recreational use of marijuana and requires the state Legislature to pass laws providing for medical marijuana use by 2022.Under Amendment A, adults over the age of 21 can possess up to one ounce of marijuana and can grow marijuana plants under certain conditions.
These five states join a growing number of states with permissible recreational and (more prevalent) medicinal marijuana use on the books.
As we previously detailed here and here, state marijuana-related laws have myriad impacts on the workplace. To name just a few, the fast-changing legal landscape in this area has implications for employers' drug-use policies and drug-testing procedures; disability accommodations and disability discrimination claims; wrongful termination charges; and potential conflicts with the federal Drug-Free Workplace Act.
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