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January 4-10,1990 WORLD & NATION Wednesday, November 1,1989 Bush, Congress strike deal to increase minimum wage WASHINGTON (AP) — President Bush and the Democratic-controlled Congress agreed Tuesday to raise the hourly minimum wage to $4.25 by April 1991, a compromise clearing way for the first increase in nearly a decade. Both the White House and the Democrats made sig nificant concessions to strike the deal, which for the first time since the minimum wage was established 50 years ago would allow employers to pay a subminimum “training wage” to teen-agers with little work experi ence. The compromise ends a lengthy and often bitterly partisan battle that pitted Democratic congressional leaders and organized labor against the Reagan and Bush administrations and business interests. “No side will get a victory for this,” Rep. Augustus Hawkins, D-Calif., chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee, said. “We didn’t want the train ing wage to begin with but we wanted to depoliticize the thing.” The deal was struck between White House Chief of Staff John Sununu, House Speaker Thomas S. Foley and House GOP leader Robert Michel. Hawkins and other lawmakers prominent in past minimum-wage bat tles complained about being shut out of the talks. Some Democrats also said Foley conceded too much. But they agreed to the deal, which was being drafted Tuesday and, barring unexpected disagreements over language, will he presented to the House on Wednes day as a substitute to a Democratic bill scheduled for a vote. Senate passage is expected to follow shortly. Once signed by Bush, the legislation would trigger a 45-cent increase in the minimum wage on April 1, to $3.80 an hour, with the jump to $4.25 coming a year later. The last increase in the minimum wage came in January 1981, when it increased from $2.65 an hour to the current $3.35. The new subminimum, which could be paid to work ers 16-19 years old for three months, and up to six months in some cases, would be 85 percent of the mini mum wage. Democrats and union leaders long have considered such a “training wage” unacceptable. However, it be came clear that agreeing to the provision was the only way to win a general increase after conservative Demo crats and moderate Republicans helped Bush sustain a veto of a minimum-wage bill passed by Congress earlier this year. In siding with Bush, those lawmakers argued that employers would be reluctant to hire youths for part- time and summer jobs if the minimum wage was in creased without an accompanying subminimum. For his part, Bush gave up nine months from his of fer to increase the minimum wage to $4.25 in January 1992, and he also conceded ground on the training wage. He had demanded a six-month provision for all workers regardless of their age and prior work experi ence. Anti-abortionist remains in jail, refuses to pay fines to get out ATLANTA (AP) — Abortion foe Randall Terry has spent the first four weeks of his two-year sentence behind bars and out of the limelight, but his critics still accuse him of us ing his jail time as a publicity ploy. Terry, the outspoken leader of Operation Rescue, is serving time for leading a wave of demonstra tions outside women’s clinics in At lanta during the Democratic Na tional Convention last year. The 30-year-old born-again Christian and former car salesman has been jailed 34 times previously for his protests, the longest time for about a month in 1987. Unlike other jail terms, Terry hasn’t been allowed to do jailhouse interviews this time and is limited to one 10-minute phone call a week. “We don’t get the access that we had before,” said Barbara Magera spokesman at Operation Rescue’s headquarters in Binghamton, N.Y. “We just got a little note from him, just encouraging us and telling us he is doing well. That was all that we heard from him.” Operation Rescue is a loose-knit grassroots organization founded by Terry in November 1987, three years after he and his wife, Cindy, began standing outside a clinic in Binghamton trying to discourage women from having abortions. It has a mailing list of about 20,000 people,and Magera claims 35,000 supporters have been jailed for pro tests. Terry was moved last week to the Alpharetta Correction and Rehabili tation Center, north of Atlanta. He had been held in the Fulton County jail since Oct. 5. A1 Pierce, warden in charge of the medium-security facility, said Terry is being treated like any other in mate. He lives in a dormitory and has been assigned a job, Pierce said, although he didn’t know what the job was. Magera said she had been told Terry worked on a crew’ instal ling water pipes. Terry was given a 24-month sen tence Oct. 5 for his criminal trespass and unlawful assembly convictions over protests at an Atlanta women’s clinic July 19, 1988. Fulton County State Court Judge John Bruner said he would suspend the sentence if Terry would pay two $500 fines, stay out of the five-county metropolitan Atlanta area for the 24 months and agree not to break any more Georgia laws. Terry refused, and also refused to pay a $2,000 bond that would have kept him out of jail while Operation Rescue appeals his sentence. He said the amount was too high. No date has been set for the ap peal. Terry has said he would serve the full two years, if need be. The ac tivist could go free any time he de cided to meet the requirements and pay the $ 1,000 fine. California^; continues to cleanup Workers find boi of two more victiii SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Workers searching the tw wrecakge of Interstate 880fom the bodies of a woman anda in separate vehicles, some weeks after the earthquake,! lice spokesman said Tuesday The body of Joyce AnnMa! 31, of Berkeley, Calif., wasfi around 7 p.m. Monday, said meda County Sheriffs Sgt. ]i Knudsen. Around 7 a.m. Ti day, searchers found thebodi James J. Flores, 39, of Park, Knudsen said. “We’re checking the vehia for personal belongings,” Kit sen said. “We have no reasot believe there are any more there.” The discoveries raised death toll in the quake’s wore saster to 4 1 and the overall no Ix-r of people who died ine quake to 66. Mabry was the mother ofa year-old lx>y and Flores had teen-age child. Those who survived thecas trophe struggled to recoverfn| their injuries. Cathy Scarpa, 37, re mar Jiway hospitalized Tuesday with ir.; - ^ tiple fractures in both legs air t ! ns crushed hand suffered wheni carpool van was smashed ini collapse of Interstate 880. Five the University of Califomiai Francisco co-workers who w with Scarpa, a registered nii: and health education, were B#han in the van. lere were some services!: ' aH '- the people who died, and io harcl not to be a part of that,! hard to be here dealing with this and not being a panofr? rnal life," said Scarpa, sometiic: tK)n ‘ through tears, from her bed ^ F.den Hospital in Castro Valle' Scarpa is one of dozens i. ;>on * hospitalized with broken lim! and other injuries sufferedinit devastating earthquake Oct that killed 64, crippled the Franc isco-Oakland Bay Br and buckled a 1'/a-mile section the 1-880 freeway in Oakland In all, 2,874 people wt treated and released and f were hospitalized, enoughtofl large hospital. j ByC t s : aid. 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