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HomeMy WebLinkAboutBatch 10Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton,,, 01-- RENTON INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL JUN 28 2023 TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: RECEIVED CLERKS FFICE We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of niiiA� o persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date SaouA&1/6:e4 1 Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 1. 2. Anno— _T 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. to. n(e w N() or m q tr P) S E' Renton Renton Renton 4 / -z3 K✓ISfi� y`I J ���`I� ����1�(, l� Renton c\ 30 (� Renton �1� AVe l� Renton JP_ 51 �W��✓l Renton(% Renton AIJ1 1�`��1QI\ � �l ✓Z� �Renton KC�LJ �7%� Renton Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. ® �e�GCC/IBA*� 933-M xecwraiavrc�° . AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bus, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($I) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar yew will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current yew. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar yew will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous yew. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current yew. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity, 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competentjurisdicdon against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and c. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. I£ an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clew and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the workshe and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements o£RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a coveredemployer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. . "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser Date Canvassed ; Canvasser Email and Phone Number: > Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: ® 19. CC/IBT 933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date S400&-!/ota4 Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 �f 1. ',l� rf Vc� �Vh�� i(goSW �ot0 �bero� Renton 2. J i� � J %��%1.,r Renton s. w _ .� \_ 10 HbW -1 0 Z, I ( C�, Renton >{2�, Z 2- ci l �r j' 7?> t _ ,f� v 90"Cc ��5. ir— b col �sk o ??�Z• a1rE Renton 7 Gel .rcgi 6. reGz �!• !-'O �(/� /1 Z' 75 Renton 120? /\l tO" PIGCr 1311 Renton giN-na$ _, 8. �1 `✓L'.�,. 'u is Pr v� r, IG1/ (�° t �/T� 4 4 �' 994L , , Renton OIN fL r+E 9. -NN Renton Z ! ZuT y� e`xnv�vv`oi eicv�o r�n 10.lWRenton Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every Inge employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar yen, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current yen. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because thew claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010, An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to =natty certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton 1. 2.( 3. 4. c 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: ® i GCC/IBT 933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email S400&-Perm Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org Date 4/10/2023 AL-4 AI i Ai �� f��� 77 t'iCY /v Renton Renton )G�Z�J 6V21 UIVL6 1tVV/A6 Renton Renton �%1�0�S�cl'� �`rt ZJ-,ls-a3 _y (/\ 0t 7-wv� — Renton wt,A-�CCft� � � l 5 �r 9�05 6 l � w G,rc)n Co [[IA3 9030 Sawar� 4k Avs S k if Renton //�WlSr {� ' Sao �ko� p Renton b�! Lci- 'W\3 4 S 23 �\r_$�w 5i313 f1E�� Renton �1LS�Z(pQ��U �1S V� Renton O51 Z3 Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they straggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($I) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees timing all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management, C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section S. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and c. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that me unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The tern, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip, "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Date r7" Email and Plain 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. s. 9. 10. Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: ® ccaier 933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date S`U0&Z Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 'C; / I Renton(�J S 1�' r S PU Renton 2'33 -1:-i,�t �e �o �G2 Renton �J%' °raj G�gAfii)el 03q00. c(i�m l� L-� I I �) ,/ 23 k�✓OO ,S Renton 20�-LI mvee�(v . �/15/ 23-3b1 (% �33 �U3b Renton (y� 2�3V-1 74 v 5 fiG S'• M / Ste- S, / % i� �/IA, Zk 1-W SW��i y tom, wjl, .l rU \ Q� Renton N%(,yW( W 0.� P_V 1� a Nr Renton e 46 b I1() 5432 15/Z5 X ,� °`^�' k�(J Ck\G '� JCS 2bIt4 _rvc 1tt^ Renton �`i 2S) �3 3 �10�' ' Ef 19 113 2��D w °I�OS(o ( U 1 �/ - 2k l 4 )v c -1 � Si- l(11/1. A {1 C'um �vI 1 1 6rA 1nv, non �srr,cr� Renton (ZCoC�)cg�l�i I12y Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent, 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January I thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each yew thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint controlby one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other personabout an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter, the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right order this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section S. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per amnum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or tbeirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter, 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. 2 3. z 5. 6. 7. s. 9. 10. Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 Lv yqG5 - (ik�-k b a; eM �(/ w LP— Luc ) y�Zf5 i yT:�+h M Cr Renton 7 'i y k Renton 161 60�Z� o,n�ffG� OJf q c> F, jrd e 2b2� uw()0r2 1p�jc-. 3600 I-..i a' a & Renton Renton Renton Renton Renton 10� _? 3a Z3S6�0 Renton 2'o6 — Renton Renton L-l/Z /z 3 Z3 k wl `1 <2 �'_(/ lz Vgl'25 . Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be ®GCC/IBT • 933-M guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; J;2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following yew using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less thanzero. 5.An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips'and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 11, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered eiliployers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. e 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employEes will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; c. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. I. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation;; the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to -the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was sdbject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per antrum or the maximum 'rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. - 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, *hether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; A- b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. _ d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, ..or their job titles or other means of classifying employes differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there.shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence; that the employer,yeolated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: - I. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise _fee" is meant to beeonstrued broadly to include any instance, in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees me employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500employees in aggregate. ' "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). - "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. c Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, wtych shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Number: 1 Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: ® I.E.D1 933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email SaNr�iFe'Uotec Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org I 2. 3.� r 4. � , ILAti jf) 6. 7. c�iOS J6� 9. 10. KaK4i M E/li s C r� nai5n 7>/c PJG Renton �Z9S;,--785 g ntr1CknA6uW.ec/u Renton 190/ tJ /7-r,� n/ Renton (20&' 335-!`2 Z7 2 20`G /� a�r7� Renton Renton Renton Renton Renton ZDc. zo 6 If Date 4/10/2023 I / c/,, /S � rov��p Renton Renton luC, Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health cue, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health cue while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46,160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per how. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each how worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar yew will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees timing the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, =us] gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but we not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hams if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clew and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standwd of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per antrum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terns shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of when; those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the. grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. - "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hows). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: p cccnaT 933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date Sa"'`UO Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 1 2. m; (01 L S. i ✓\,A, Fib 'rc_ (( • ) q 2 L C_( J � / L 7­J! 3. 4. V" - y Li 5. - 5��a� Jb%/vLSor 7 6. , 7. � + -;�� l ��� I i D vi I l;� h P] I 9. Renton Renton Renton Renton Renton Renton �I Renton _C/ S__) I \_� � l 10V NV, 'r Renton q/l512c z3 - 0 b- i L115 goy ,� ✓ )� Renton C� I 3(je uM 06125 l t�15 kv-a. if (col i�'(�G 10. �j� I� SAwN�v\A-�� V_\ C n 20830 1LA5 k Renton t125 1 45: UZ�a Sc�" r�n �o�a h�a I ale Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current yew. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time-and-a-halfor other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter, the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competentjurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter For the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has =net gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profitfrom a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensue compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of itsapplication to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: r Email and Phone Number: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: p ccna� 933-M f'a- .�euvxu' We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email S4MA&'?10tM Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org Sly I n 5 %' Rantnn 2. /�/1/j/� A�(�(�h(�✓G� i�UV�tGtt/1 1L��7 �Gt(/t�i ��jlVe SOU Al 4 Renton 4. 7. 8. 9. 10. Renton Date 4/10/2023 ) 5-'�3 o q /f-/Z3 �-f� ,i 1 �1� �i�"l0 ��r%v� •Y 1,Q�t� Renton�JG�'��j 5•(✓ 3�oSd ��� e� V X� doytti<�on / I �1,t /�a/ Renton g0e?3II Renton (og SS �f2�S Z� i P) Renton �34 wens !eve 5 Renton Renton 1-�2_T=.273-),a( Renton So�_ 5<�L172& Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees timing the previous calendar yew, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous yew. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but me not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terns and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. I. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accme from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a. class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: I. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010, "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date Satzee%%rar Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 1. ✓/ 'l( IdiL' ��nt Renton 3�L1123 2. Fl� i:sac� S ��e9Cf I S 3� VQsi�or\ kve Sl Renton I � / 23 3. Renton -�� 4. Renton r " I Renton ` 1 Renton 7. � %� Renton 8. QSI V (D �' lit V 1t J Renton (P Ca � U � 9. AAI � / -I-7I(1 S .�,��c _( s7�a ✓� C.-�0 Renton I iw`�'� f�5� hic/` �I11" 1 Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. 933-M '0a+uwarNvwM^`O AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers we well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January I thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46,160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1, Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, par -time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they fora an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but me not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. I. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competentjurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are umelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2., The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: i Canvasser Email and Phone Number: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date Sam 1% Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 /aht eve 1• Renton %%n r7-- 2. Renton 1! 3. ��✓ � US % g02I cYt /2P�t— Renton (✓ L t A _� !� 4. Qa %� _ \gas �t/l �Gl ��� ��15��( 20 1 �n At - Renton r Renton 5. r GiK4 i lRenton 6. 7. q3 G� Renton t5(C:t 5E IL«!ilt PtcuQ31 Renton 5�0- 8. 2-3 rz't) kzG�esti �7�6� 5��V S� Renton �� `i�>' 10to-) " O'V — I"look' Renton Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. ®GCC/IBTe- 933-M AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuing that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bus, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46,160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar yew in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. L Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter, 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person isnot lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. S. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and c. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including. city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: ® fsccneT 933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date Sar0e`(/atac Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 1.a Renton z. �-�`' l� ! r.,l` � �✓ Renton 3. Renton 4. �^Ytw z� a�e SC Renton ZO(�'a3q-10�5 ��ld�rea��'��zi� 17 e 5. N Renton �lisl� CqF UZL"_1 Renton c2i -kZ `�� �fI c� ICtCk�tCi. Cod t 7. C.�,ovvl�v Ctir% �Cf EgucaJe soG,�zo JV ('ejjg(C Ave SC r0 la 10. Renton L4ae7 S�_q 3 6 5 a C' 1 P�c�iPS 0 �('f �--- C) 00N Rve N � Renton - z b M� Renton/( 5_'� -� S�Us� 3crsgK� Renton Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide army of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child cue, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the currentcalendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar yew, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue timing the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on thew behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees we similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of itsauthority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees me employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. 40 Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number city Phone Number Email Date SaHn&Pe`Uotan Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 U 665ivQ3e.C4 Warning 2a2 ) Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. A t 9 ;o �cnaT� 933-M AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction, The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. I, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: I. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonablejudgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but me not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and c. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter me cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements o£RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements.. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 1. l/ �� Qlt✓� II(/) ✓5�✓i �\(tidOVv Awt M Renton V ICgv i/l� •�ratlC 2. Ak, Gnu 4b G/0 zAk Pd1Ct/'4' D( �/ Gu Renton -3 G P� zw s. t,J � 4,4 rU z I_3 0 L r IV d q 5, S Y sue' Renton 4. ��'" /�,�,�'��� p ' E(� ���.5e I, S�{r "r'V! Renton �(2� 6�'�5� \��!✓1fLS�`�.� c� Renton 6. �4/ TAM Renton Ifas)bqi-717 ; �1 i3rC t�� ��0 C4 Lt S Renton 63'q b o 22 S.IIJV Jd Cf�i g GIJ ke Renton 9. Renton 10. Renton Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. ®e�8 933-M AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bus, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January I thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Pbase-In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($I) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. I. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to. a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonablejudgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but we not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clew and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus,interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party mewsanemployee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions alto liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to thew claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and me not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) yews. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. _3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code, Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser r. Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number city Phone Number Email Savee`Uat�n Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 1. Y 'q(il jxrr ( e-i .I Date 4/10/2023 U V ` ,G/2 �j`'i�l`l V6-C�'t%jj �GQV Renton i 2. low 3. r V�' /� t�j � i ICU � C �I U� i� ��S S u hset I VO n/ h Renton La 4. D wvi�t U' N Renton 41 12-.3 Renton C/ 6.�Y�/'L � Renton 5 1 �C , �/ Renton �. l�-r��r v M�/14 l �b3 U l 3Z i"�� pL S � � a. LOna %nyOca Luna r:1QVGiQ IB(o3U 131 km PL 5E, Renton 9. Cra'-c fed le✓ `t3« NE S" cT #/ov Renton 7/Z/Z 3 10. Renton��%I L� Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. A ®���"�' 933-M AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a, All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, In the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participatejointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject `concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code, Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. a. Name Of Canvasser: b Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton 1 2. INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date SaMA& 0 Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 kx,kk-✓`�°(ti— . Renton 3. 1 fWAG,*ft(6 7;�C,�GG/ 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. �t G� n ti YN.✓ til I 5ri-11etldty y/ Svc Renton I Renton Renton i5ct�r� � 5Z 19% l�! �r� 5/— Renton 7G%-Z06- 2,C(-k �(1QV1�lQ ( Vo 3Q3Lt Of b A S�— Renton 01 1 PC Renton 2A i; 9314.9 Renton U/I// / V'�S a Renton �"��� Renton �'/ IIA02-,7 Vd • Sfdhl�?yh-�i[ Cv/h u L(/4/Z.�> j Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. ®"="—"B- 93-M AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts wound the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Newby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health cue while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employeesin the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac; and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay.employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each how worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current yew. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for ad employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to, a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. - 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section S. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages, compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of my other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. Anew section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: I. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed,broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employeeAs personal meals or errands "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. - Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. ' Name Of Date f ;Cony ss mail and Phone Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date Safft*9/ore& Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 4&6' b 1- Sato Otnct y / / .% �rf0� C-, Rontnn Nm AA 5 jt)�'Jyj$. Dp 1 I M&- 715— Z327 Warning u Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the Izrgestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts mound the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent, 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health cue, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health cue while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. I. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage, Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. I. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar yew will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar yew, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they we under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter, the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similes questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter me cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of my other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. ' "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 Pad 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance we declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. s. 9. 10 INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: ® 933-M ,ate o: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date 5400&varer Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 r- 61— / At Renton C'C� Renton n, -aS u�� " 60SYK01 SU-(( (, 'Q-' 7' Aj)l - I�'kl'P, Renton y75U2lbgo c h l����wc�w v��h,��>>1, ��1�i�12_ Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with newly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bus, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health cue, child cue, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Newby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to team in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49,46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they we underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter, the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section S. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Email and Phone Number: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: ® 1933-M ,.M�,o,,a„ecnerw„„m We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 i. GH�IS c �i91/CL (40q Renton ✓�I 63 2. Iv Renton (P!�i �2 c -Z (P V\.000LV.v�v�vpf- t�C�IIS 3. ' _\ M,?,Y-C,6hS Twlj�ju I�yoy SE 118 Renton (-o(.)7&j3-Zz9g .11bG/7� �jJvr�vl�. Cyr, 4D��ljl2� 4. �` J' C / �� STD �t�l Q� t vl I b?�S I �jZ ILL Renton c y��lZ3 PL Renton 9// (/. t q&, 4 aj (d Uv j Renton 12� 7. So va\n �� 2 APfi \ Renton �ZS '� L�- `3 0 SQ SCDOt� IZ� V10�W�Gt11 Cory-, OH /ls z� s � v15 Renton /Z Renton G%�Oz e�PW��� 10., Renton Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families cam insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Searle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per how. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. I. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they fora an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and it. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competentjurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." SeeFilo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 RM 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance me declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. 2. 3. 4. 5. a 7 3 Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: a ACC/IBT 933-M 9BF1GW9W [A1M� We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date Sany&Izaraa Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 ja Will, t ;f,ec" W,'III(&Y�i $ �.I � r oyn KtItA -� Q_ S e. \� u 9. Al, t 10 q 21'v' 1-1 �`/ "rY-� ?53 Renton Renton Renton Renton Renton Renton Renton aoa-8854- �/6 150 -7ff4-esS_�_ elil Liz, Renton C-1 Nye V' Ire<< Renton 10(0 - 9!;1_1 � Z ZU I— Renton 41 K/t3 Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they straggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January I thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, me itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current yew. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management, C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about thew rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violatedthis chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section12.- Ruleroaking. " Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adeqquate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organiz2ons and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 RM 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: ®acccnar 933-M � CCA We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date s4ffo& `pdmt Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 1. Renton 2. L`5 �I U� �� ( I. cl� Renton 3. ��$�' �1�3 fi�rn� Renton 3- 332 - 7-77-7 ctV, a '/ /�// Nc: 25 b IIs �'�� � vow i . �,� 4. L /kz Poe ���2Zt� /�l�F�� V'L �C Renton LIDS ��� �3yz lU��°t5�l���o� tMa l,Cav� Vlvz:� 5. Vy�\ tLIP `o Q (/tn4 rVok Renton �Xp ` I t2 A(-- Renton 6 ;%'t oUtz!3/23 7. VyVI 1�" � c� ID Renton (3�5� s � 1� s. Ill. - � L . 11 V )a7Gf 4Z i) p✓jjZ154 Sz-::; Renton I'K Renton (WZ) 355-4 q/ /3 l oz3 � �� C —ZO O 3�as 'F�GR b N!'evt- t`1� Gf 6G af3 10. 3(f t % Renton Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way location. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, testaments and bus, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they me more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health cue while enduring other hardships that prevent then ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensue access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per how. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar yem, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they we underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have. been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terns shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: I. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensue compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: ® Eece. 933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date S`U0e' Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 3. 1` dp lo54. � 5. / a r✓ 6. 7. 8. !/ 9. 1 10 17� Lb R El erg 610 n.� So- PCktgiVA0(Jt' Aye AE f oti , W q ln.� f /V S06 Pr-6A/ I I A%J �5 in 17ana\a V%Morl 34c"—k i ay-e Renton 't_ GG T uq Renton Renton 91Z- G Renton Renton j61j'4f g_eI83 6 Renton Renton Lf t7 Renton ZD_� _�� 41 Renton �C 67�-)b%ate Renton orh 60. C6 m Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each how worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the averagenumber of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of thew location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material changein the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved parry was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and c. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that we unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49,46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer, "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The tern, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: p accenar 933-M wl We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email S4'aA& otea Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 1. %���\ LIB (1L�U�S I�U' I�! I�1�,' Renton 2. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. / w�A C U FM r /;/�- J1/- /� / Z -zff 5 PC1 15O0 X1 1 SNje� Pie S E r 07 v T q %U l04,1-\ /0 1 Renton 'In 7lr°6 Renton Renton ' Lr e, t Y,� -- Renton a/t—U4 -- 4 Renton Renton N� y 0 52)0j Renton Date 4/10/2023 ':�3' �o a, �4 3 Renton 206- ,o 97— ()3q' J i 0) d f-w I /lam_ Renton � � � . � y /T Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. i z3 4�Z� AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section S. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annam or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed For the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. I£ any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: p GCC/IBT 933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature 5400& Ildren Printed Name Printed Name Street and Number 1234 Anywhere St. city Phone Number Email Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org Date 4/10/2023 51-b1ZcFl3 1ea �J -1-k �l1 G(� �C(2 ��� `��� Renton ��� 3 KEG �/ ���� Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center,.the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer o£jobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hums; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, me itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per how. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. - 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competentjurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per antrum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.0X 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar fors of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter we cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The tern, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject `concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to horns). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. JU" Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL 1 2. TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date satf�',*%r�'z Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 Renton a S Renton 7-LA 763-64u LLwn(o It -e NEI Renton 3. 4. �iW,�w� s�q/�,� w- li'IS7 y l w .cue �L Renton 5. J, �d-2 ���/S� Renton 6. /i // /%// ('` /l� �1�iv! i (�rnNl ,� .. 1� �e 7 Renton 60v^ Z('G i 5/Za 1 Z-3 5 %zl/ 23 5/'2� /)z 3 Rentond�SG —�L(�S SI0Z . 8. Jaea f � �Z �niO67'x p✓e- /vo Renton )-66 vg�. 9.0 'T laws �5 1 Z YVh 1!J Renton 10.i V �12�� �l S� d�1MR�,/� ��� n � Renton Z�� I� ZjZI �Ut� ,bYUC7� 03� Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be o_ guilty of a misdemeanor. `�"�0 93a.M' AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare,. and office workers are well represented. 3, The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health cue, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January I, 2025, and on each January I thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($I) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attomey fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per arum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 49.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other mews of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy my violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter me cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49,46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: I . A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the,City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees me employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC Y. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date S`710em Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 1. ` FS CO_L ty \3g5Uc �`I Av> Renton-3(o0- SL57 4-Zb 2.�yrl 4 Renton ZE6'YE JC(� Q � Seams � zc.�lz 3. C\/..--��"'" �iT C� �C l \ (\� A \ I Lk R 1 \ C 17 S' HAV 41 P 5 _"j jj� 1 1 4. 23Z 5urne++- Ave 3 A 11)(A Renton 7! s� frl/� SE d'(5-zTa f}-rt I Lyra �e Renton j / s. ' I � �\�'1 uti�2 (v G ��� S Renton 7. C�\nYiv� _(VDvn h lSl o S to r4. i'1 Renton 8. �DOIt, 330 r NC- g Renton 9. ,eSehia MenAor_c, Leoh 2e-vk0r-\ Renton 1Z66\14�1-0i�jc� S �ZS l23 10. Qticsr /c�2sY6 �e;r nrs 33_VT Ale- `l7�4 ��- T��f�v� Renton Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with newly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bus, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation, 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each yew thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annun or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that we unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees we employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or thevalidity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: 1 3. 4. 5. 0 I 7 10. Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number S"O&`UotM Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. 7,51� Ni2 Pl Cl City Phone Number Email Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org Renton L�Z Renton Renton r-� C Renton Date 4/10/2023 L�lz to `-kW �`��� f\Jf 4�1 G+, Renton CA--r\j 2703 ILIA +f Cf Renton � 06 , ZSS 21Q2 ��v�hcGu��y �0& yMe(e (foy a a� ✓ J Renton aG T Renton t~f�K Ieb 2�i� NC 4 G� Renton �13�3S�2S2 5�2� 2� Renton zS3 21 y7y s ;l$ 13 Renton Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. 3 AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families can insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; c. Centralized control of labor relations; and it. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be. required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the - employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52,020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined a; set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: 410 Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton 1 a INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: ®cccna� 933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature S"O& 1/otet Printed Name Printed Name Street and Number 1234 Anywhere St. Ui'jlV°" aT City Renton Phone Number 206-555-1234 Email maria@something.org Date 4/10/2023 Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers we well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they straggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTaq Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of then location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but we not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. I. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competentjurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per antrum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that we unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49,46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards For certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTaq 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. ow Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: kvIsser Email and Phone Number: 1 R Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, f�e submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date S°l0&4 Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 �V jib 27/r'1) 0I�(�W� Z ��0 ED!u0N1)5 C itl (✓r Renton Zo 6 7i 4 7 9 (417 21�4niA0t7o0Ave z®�„�k . CoK ° 4. l /2/ �C!//� 3d.S� (4q LcJ10)�ls��� 5. / 7.�--1 7 6 �' C)n.'6")S Ci , Kx Renton 2-0U 35" oIIS Lfv 6+ ,U E Renton Renton i113j E- i� Y Renton 11:25`7 &� 5T Renton �`370-jq* �525 I 1 +th Auese- Renton &W<5- ZCj'I\ rIZ-L010 IFLi65— IILo4-) Av-e 5E Renton Renton 10. �7 (avjm chC�i 111J 1��1� P��E S�� Renton v°� Db�J����' I4 ("�k (� R S 6q 10 P 1 U LIN W�A �lZ� SAS/ Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, a; well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time-and-a-halfor other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about thew rights under this chapter, the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competentjurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise,at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46,070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject `concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 RM 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: 1. 2. 3. 0 5. 0 7 91 Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated Signature S`7/0&4 Printed Name Printed Name Street and Number 1234 Anywhere St. City Renton Renton Phone Number 206-555-1234 ZO �OL Email maria@something.org ' ie o Date 4/10/2023 �3o oZ'; /0 't� Renton 7A6 - ®� a�� Lo V' C1^G1n ( L atk P< L Renton b l- y�} 'pSSC1�at����� Iv�car�.r�tm �( 11so�3 Glo l C� /Y(y �y� S Renton L� — 7;Y 7�o- I ✓Z Ur/ro h��n I (�h ��'7 z 11t-f Au-( SE Renton :�D6-q-3L(-5!S-; Renton Z�'� 7 7 7 1:2/1), L4- Lisa s _ Renton _ 222 _ LJ 0 Je? S Renton lSGYI L s �15 rL Renton YZ-r-, Z7`7.7-7 3� / l `l v / 5E %a5 & Renton " 9_6 /i 7— 7 7J 513)Z,3 Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: I. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1, Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have FairAccess to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney feesand costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per arum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and c. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant. records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided trader this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49,46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49A6.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46,160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law, Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: e Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number city Phone Number Email Date sawZPe` az Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 2. A 4. , 5. Renton 038 /z Rentnn S / 2 ? Renton �I�a Ild�u S ig6�' 1 Renton 5 513o1a3 Mackisby-) ty-avD )0)936 S� �g(� Si Renton I3U �3 7. 10. t^ �&`�_-57/—Renton i81A Renton V2 S %%" R e-el � � ( v(( I D'� S)—P� 1� Renton Renton Renton _�7 z Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It. is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. I. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: I. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees timing all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer,. union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make animplied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to thew claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and we not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute. of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 793, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: Raisina The Minimum Waae In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number city Phone Number Email Date S�QJz Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 1. ►// �j �ei 1I 20 d a io� a V P Renton --A - z. 2` J*e-5-74 Renton3. �% �/ Renton 4.(/Sc �� �/ �i C/ �Y� ✓ �, ' I Cam' (,t c/ �7� 8 �y Nw�o4 U-e K Renton 5. i �f,cl� N SQs1, 7Z LInAwooI Qe OJrc: Renton -as-a3 6. �qi//�/��i C[j s)iY13 ✓D Renton 31. a3 7. pp n p 1- I� /ZfiTC IJL�� t! <� s� J Renton 23 8. __ �clq 144 4}/ I do �e �e�v�� 5i Renton 9. V A�fi� lu ar. �'%058 Renton -23 10. Dwc vie UDC, V1 no6 S cAq 4Renton C'10 �;5- Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek - in an election when he or she is not a In al voter or si nc a etition when he or she is otherwise not ualified to sign or who makes herein an false statement shall be 9 g g p q y guilty of a misdemeanor. ®'�"'BT" "' AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Eamers and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar yew will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clew and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section S. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on thew behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per union or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: I. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as; well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC Y. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number city Phone Number Email Date SaWA& Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 1. 1, ` Renton 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Renton - �_)_vl 510"' (�1VYC5 1{eYnan�e� �j?JZ N ��t �� Renton lN�u rF� �� Nto sT� Renton 57o 5/�13 4V�ik1% t ll3 Gl�jl� )Jh Avp lVE Renton 2 r Renton Q Renton Z:9 yS3-9�i6s Di�2a! 2� 'AraT1 Renton 10_Ss6� iK�ck?v�-LQ� P-V' flG Renton P�e_cr Le A/L Renton 5 %a Spa 3 Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; c. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonablejudgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and c. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated,this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the. purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: I. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: L A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers" See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date Saw `/��0� Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 2. V 3.U12�Co 5 10. nt. 6✓us 4 L� DeMps �(L� G Renton Renton 216D.5LIo �'�� �l . I Renton Renton - as a-3 v. / 2,00 5IV Slti ('l ��� C103 (��c.a_ - �l GiZtlt-q RQv l�j °� SOS Renton 11 A Renton `� � lot Renton I Z( 0 I j q l U� S� `�Ira58 Renton 100 T�Wi2D S� SE Renton RentonS S-a3-a3 Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. 0 `��C/18T- 933-M AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy, Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($I) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of Interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter, the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter, the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per arum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: I. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt mles and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. - Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: II. Canvasser Email and Phone Number: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: 01i. eT O 933-M �BWGppBM W^"" We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature 1 2. Printed Name Printed Name Col � c,(. Street and Number City Phone Number 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 say 5 i d 5,'Ie✓ens Ave 5.,, Renton a ov AQ L- 7' 3. c—` r�� �I�hnw lab ✓ �7a I Nip C� Nl 91 10. rl �1 '-Vl'� I J !o qG3 0. eeti 4,- iV 3 Q�'6E-Al Renton I ? Renton Renton —)040 Renton `Lvc���"y-� � w Renton ,I! Z S_� S J I Renton 1 j 1-q Renton Renton Renton Email maria@something.org Date 4/10/2023 S111/J? Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. �_ i /Zh�l ? g-/ Z' AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; c. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiving through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per mum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The tern, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees me employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. 4111 Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton 1 2. 4 5 INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: ® cccnaT 933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date Say A&I/arer Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 CCa,S CAA � LICI-r-4 10 2.iL— SI7() r"�C2r�,vy(_ A_Ur U7 Renton y(gcl - TI C.U, _'_M'iv19,h a,{-t uL[ .ejLA Renton Renton � 'ill `�VJ 111�', I lobe e n t o n Ilny�'�� ^2�r Renton k�_ jV(ckcU�-+(,t 6. �% � Kp& zw c M t--tmme N �1 Renton ' 1 _t�t� o;a I�! ` +z� , 123 7. Renton 8. 1 /��tit L ✓ l 'i� �Y zL!� %1 Renton x� _S=� �� 9. ^ u LL t- .J I Renton _ _.ZS 2- to. � `/ !�� ._- ptahflc� V QfVo'1 h / 7 V 1 �G�✓�>f t l � � � Renton Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the =not rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, we itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established order Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current yew. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. -• 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prdhibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per am = or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 RM 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof [q any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of This q ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name D vasser Email and PI 1 2 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date s2io for Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 V1�83� V��nviu, ��31 �� 5Z�f va Wri Renton V ✓ �1l Yl J L-64vLuo /T(F•f lfb1� �SUZ 2d— Renton �o�EY CAMP �t 4g INQ6P< !,E Renton °18�5�j 5 f2f�23 Renton IC I�"lll����lG1�lPly "�% I oil Renton Renton 9�OS7� 5/25��023 Renton 1W f(i1r_ 9, Taho9-box Ave tit Renton I�Ii q(Q0'05 5129 2� JC)`�2Rc�9_ �U2N Renton �ZS C35^��g� 5 Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts mound the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bus, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health cue, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January I thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49,46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Pbase-In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar yew in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current you. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous yew. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter, the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an earployee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per arum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49,46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees me employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concems labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. SeverabiliTy. The provisions of this ordinance we declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date sties Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 jaw r:( Ic 2. JiA In e &1(— Z 30 1 Alf-' q f' s7� Renton / t '�7� Renton Flo 3. �' I/✓a1P�A✓o Al (, Renton Renton 4. L �4 NZ n P. i : . , _ ! , Renton Cj /)ndr �OSel MEMOMrr111111 6 5 i`I t rnA4IL A to M N s �c� (? a (. L • c-o.M WIN i25-306-7071 �j�'ca✓r1ti✓I�u✓I�i�:�val C�^� D, -5(1,� uZ5-1 ( -+-z&Z s 4L,5-126 Renton I�5_41-7T'�G CRenton Renton 647 1-_ Renton halo. 7,qq (o4S 0 --- Renton ��"5fe" t_�' 5A %3 S Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: I. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5.'Goverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. -2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Sao:rke�Uot� Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org Date 4/10/2023 o5vRenton iSZ��>�1—n ' Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. °C` AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bus, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonablejudgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter•, the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible Purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or My other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section S. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competentjurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief, 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. lr 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: I. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, a; well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at leas115 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaldng. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rates and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton 1 2. 3 4. 5. A 7 0 t INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: a 111 s933-M �BMgpyM We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Printed Name Street and Number 1234 Anywhere St. City Phone Number Renton 206-555-1234 Renton l X Email maria@something.org Date 4/10/2023 T1131�f Renton Renton .ilV 2�j qiprf //rt rCli�rO ?�S TV Renton efA ?ci +Aa� iS L� �at�C;U 933 EdwA s Ak Renton Z�6 2!,cg2-1_S 469)23 Renton ��fr pis s1o�12 — L//; (L Renton �j e-_ Oawu o ! 0 ✓ l V � Renton ;L Renton (� a3 PCt1�GC�'VW` nLt(� JS�C���S�VEGEC Renton IS 213 Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts mound the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they straggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTaq Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTaq and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, aze itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee me in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they me underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer air employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terns and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per arum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter, If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter we cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code, Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. OrName Of Canvasser. Date Canvassed, Canvasser Email and Phone Number: J 1. 2. Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email s vorm Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org I`{l�Kd(4 tae7 Ir,,A0 Renton , ��j — C \ Renton l2"21711 lJ Date 4/10/2023 3. { Av\v,,-A ise- h35 RL N)F Renton S123 I 3 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. ROL k G 5\ � C Renton ? 19 Rentonu_3�1/�7 Renton ��5��by /&7_7 I �l?r A'S�Gt�l SS 2j� Renton [a 46i7 N� 9�A f( Renton 'Y2lE�d' 1� ��W�ciY�4r�fafJ �a�an.�a Jf23�i� Renton ;lam 7g Renton cer Sy­?� 3 l Z 512�212,-�> Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented, 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 horns each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar yew in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current yew. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter•, the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competentjurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participmejointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1, The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees we employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: 1 2. 3. 0 5. n 7 a 10. Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL G TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Printed Name Street and Number 1234 Anywhere St. City Renton Phone Number Email 206-555-1234 maria@something.org Date 4/10/2023 Renton -7clo6_Cyff Renton ?�o>C/ 1 (�3`lf ILC-Renton Renton 3/ Virg (,,� %� �c �� z Renton " UV-vt p U� S � � Renton Renton '�' rAax f I� — Renton 3 �� l� v�� �t•°l �' Gc�l`(.� Renton �' ��I ra`/� � � Renton Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers me well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity, The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the horns of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but me not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter, the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter•, the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5.4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: I. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 Pad 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton 2. 3. s . 6. 7 a 10. INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: ® ,cccnnr 333-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City J Phone Number Email ^$acrO&'verm Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 1cp(MV 6 q r\OE M Renton �G`' �i✓�{�Yl �� J� t1Y11� �� Renton V Renton tt ob Renton Renton l3 q-TS Renton (/ ,✓��� ��� Y� `� /�! �1 � �b Renton �Lit, Clams 375 (A_�t0.n t4^'� S I3S Renton Date 4/10/2023 S// S S/1S �ac��tr 5ar �7)kr�Q Renton �l �/�?2 N a�li CA\6j - �7�i �✓�, o� l� do - Renton Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. I. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of "Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per how. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3, Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each how worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they for an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of thew availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section S. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competentjurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per arum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. S. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: I. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not quality as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: ® GCGIp933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date S400& Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 i G ( nton / /9l� / Renton 5 ��10 Renton LS/)) 12 Renton N Renton t6l1 G✓ / L6i� �V� !� fG� Sf Renton 7 I �a✓uc�. LPi`n io pj 5/r �. /7/ a 6 / 7 N `� `e` G4— Z _ I Renton 5 9. TIPS 10 9 (9 kqv— h l v\q �o Renton r. )v e Renton Renton Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality,. healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual two of i 'on to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. Bt�De be 1, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and e a licable hour) minimum wa a for the followin ear usin the annual rate of inflation. PP Y g gY g4. Fres of this cha ter the annual rate of inflation means 100 ercent of the annual avers a owth rate of P P g grtnthl Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Y B Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities' gr P b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but me not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter•, the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter, the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, , who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49,46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: asset Email and Phone Number: 411 Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton 1. 2. 4. 6. 7. S. 9. 10. INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: p -.E 933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email s ,?1ar0r Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 1 206-555-1234 maria@something.org Date 4/10/2023 ,,//4- Renton 2 � � DC1/0E-") 1i31 i NL 3�-"Si fIEN"ro'- wA'"`_, Renton (4/zrn3 5315 IJ� 3° `Sd ��v iov. (,-)A Renton 3-553- SZ90 Lcem �/ly/zo n Renton 01���� -a,, 2 �IzrtCA n�ri � tCA- Renton �C Renton 70�- Vv1�4t�\/ ��25�L0'ln�enton �G �� Renton E ��U — � �/ �V2_3 i drat � S� Renton iN WQ�V�Ct� U NVl�1� SE /�/S� Renton C)JaUU 1IA- J` - Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient horns of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensue access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee me in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar yew, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and it. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work bows when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for bows outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter, 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall seems from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees we similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. it. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because thew claims seek damages that differ in meant, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that we unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, br engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance, 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terns shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to bows). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: o scenes 933-M �ewcwwrcx�^`" We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number city Phone Number Email s'UOfer I Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org i 2. 3 4. 5. W 7 a 10. Date 4/10/2023 q - r ICQ�2 2 � t ,r �(�J F��Jc Renton �Z6 ✓��Cb�P ak1 �2 �WI�l1�,C6M (�3C'lz Renton c"Mo � �Odr u mild Renton 0"d Y 2 Icf-Il J 1 Renton v/4" 1713 J /(D ,�h Renton I Renton c V<enton U �d (� J°�tr�yl � 1 r/ i, z, � e L_ i'o_j,.-36yl Renton :,.z06- -2 3 f I/� uo')-Gy\ ��p�IG! ��`J� SUPS Renton f14' S �v (,��✓ I q S� rI Renton Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bus, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January I thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terns and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply many person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or. subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. 1. 2. 3. Im 5. N Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date saoo& `l0&z Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 )U\J(,kV�V`U�.i^�111npi �9'1D \UP��� pc\I� %� Renton 1�-rJ��l�9 ��JUW��U\/�S�(�Y�P,��Of�GWYt IrnmG1� �¢127 IC--� /S 4u� J Renton 2m(P -c� ✓ �� /�c{rr/�1afo �C�t S / ��� I �s mfIS ajA� V z 1h4zp( [ --K Renton i9�—� I- kw_17 M Warning � — Nq f 3fc 3 S'I yy 3 Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they straggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, turned CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee, For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and it. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonablejudgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but me not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competentjurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forts of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. - 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is. defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rates and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject `concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date sYimm Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 I�i tI{�Ilf�a�u�sf i • - • 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. s. 9. 10. PIA\jox)1 , T tio, 'Da„; n CAMMcNc� S ti -670`l NZ 3`;19 NE� 9-A4 54 `1 b u � e pP� i&kS CszbA K) )too Renton Renton L5� Renton t6eiuka,QrAa,�,w,2�aL-4A--',.caw- Renton 9 3Sg'-6y y� Z_5 h/1_7-5/'5 �lz3l z.� s/z3/Z3 Renton uZS- 3,0&- s �cun, Renton Renton (5-(, % pL SC Renton U-ANAE /�3a3 Renton '23123 150, �pr t Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work, 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child cue, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health cue while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; c. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. I. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but we not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competentjurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and c. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46,070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by dear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participatejointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) yews. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the proposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010, "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set Forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 190 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. s. 9. 10. Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated Signature Printed Name s `v0rm Printed Name J�S�wti C'IoPer�e Street and Number 1234 Anywhere St. �FS�� _E 3r� Cf. Z a07 City Renton Renton Phone Number Email 206-555-1234 maria@something.org `�1���a.3 Date 4/10/2023 S a.3 A- Judy �. Uufe� 13`�l9'168 --"#ke.1,�7. Renton yZS-2Z6 P,33 �z 3 cCOY>,Vj L Q6 t4si6 L7�i37'�/kw�E � 17 6: l��1� Renton S123 Renton �' 1' t '�' �� (QU �� 2-3(23 �o-�J2rt ///ytwyy ✓J� IToUUiuwt 4ye d(� Q�ioS� Renton v rt55ar�lg �"L� 0 d2mon50r1 �4 Renton ae65gv3 Renton - 5Q -C�% IMrnn� °lib a1Ma� N� Renton S l��j/�i3 EN (� 6�p °��� .� � Renton o �- G 8�- �/ 5 � �2�/2� A,,e, Nr Renton aiv1;dIN5 am1,,�.cCPA, s/z3/z3 Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. I. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1, Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time-and-a-halfor other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible haan due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees we similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance, 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: 1 a 0 a Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date SaMA2e`Uatrn Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 ,.G' ►tj --� J LCIA �eXuls '- 1 1 �, r ld Renton 5 -IL4 5' S oL? ILIA 0J? P&I V K_lf� tX�h( �ihhwOG ��� Renton CTC9HGY/,Ze/ ��Vlq��ull �arl�er �`i� Gl enn�vood C'C �/ Renton f-M .74i r\ t 'YuiIn'nN�ris r 1 Ja C 1 d Renton J/2S%23 VVE PL Renton 6.A �f /zw Do)4a�� �7o q 1) 1�c I Renton 7. 8. 9. 10. z3 G 7� ® / / V17plu Renton �,c�/ � I( I�Qyapi< ZS/� Nt-- Pc_ Renton _5�S�� Renton Ct��l"�k�� t1%AtA6 Y-V!\ALA. kb gQ&\ 91 A VIE lm TL Renton 2(ju_qG o_q Qs Gj� S113 Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. _ 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array, of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. I. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Farmers and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49,46,160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($I) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but we not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. I. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject `concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date 5' `lMm Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 1. 0'8'0 6&jwt&j3 4vt A16 Renton .Mt 7/N 0UZ ar•,a�oQo�r�arter� �l�►'Gr�A I o„, �i� 2. rV�(�l .�x,�'i� Mho wti �I u,* cA,,,,.,,oLD X�t- kA', Renton 2S;_/ Z- 3. 1 M 653 EdHog,,& AvC NC- Renton �ZS�23 :# 5. B %G n✓ r9e 71'o' 009 76o 3 N6 F7 94rk&57 Renton 2_ o,6 cr1- 6% 57A; 3 -7 Vzc 8•c�\11 \E l ()>�1SZ1\ �'V� LCNCc ' `� Ion 1,Y'Y\ cam11V�Iji Z7M ✓1�.1 " 10. OJA44_LM tom► irC� I I ��—f�-P i' ��� lv �L Renton Renton Renton Renton 4`Z-5,- Z �fG hoc/ 6f25 %20Z3 3/zs, Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. 9 AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health cue while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculatedfrom the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section S. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competentjurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. it. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clew and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participatejointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the Following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Deportment must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragrapb, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. SS'gnatuCe Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date 52i°t�r Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 1 2. �1 ,ZE _, 1m'a,,Fzf � WE.0■N,MI J�f AAA V �o tT� A-� Renton ZOO- 2-q0' )-CM D3 )2�� % � I� �� Renton �f2��- K"z � 2 63 % S- 20 r, 4j? 5,44 i4 10.Cu'1 M WA FW V' Renton RentonS 3 571-'- Renton �{�s�r�,25s - 3,� /ZZZ7 Sr I6�'�S1_ Renton rA, l OC '�,/ /off'=-'/ ^ � IDZ7 _SF pl/ Renton _ Renton T �tp-�i✓ -7-�I Renton 5 SCR —,A) Renton -k�-- e7-2A7275� Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. s /E�l/�� AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation, 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial. control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. S. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competentjurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief, d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participatejointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terns shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: 40 yd i Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton - INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: ® GCC/IBA 933-M �e++caoae..rm�° We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number city Phone Number Email Date sdoxd&I/armc Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 1. i ����`_ ��1pi, 003 I1 V` Renton ZOO 2. �) ` I �'?x 57C Renton vvHN 3. 3 5T Renton 4. jG657aV 4pO Renton Z'J '�zS a�43 Spa/z 6Ara,(� pop r Renton 2Z��-390-03�� 5. 4 �..p OO /n� I LA__ `JIGI7j (Z `+ 315 W£L-L5 `k` F— N Renton 90-L 3g3 6. Cy 1 N1GN VE F Jl046/mod SE�/RDZ� 7. LiND/� EN} c N 5 lJ 2 Renton r �� 8. Ut�� �tr yv 37� U._ Renton (6J0/1 9. Vl�f - I SAS- �n �, Renton 3 10. Ii�� \�� Renton F' l Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Newby King County cities of SeaTaq Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to team in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTaq and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current yew. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous yew. For employers that did not have gross revenue timing the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities shore common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per arum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in meant, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other fors of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except For refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 RM 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. 2 411 Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Numbd I -. 0 ICity Phone Number Email Date sew*1/o Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 % (Gt 1 �t1� �� "I' su Renton 4�S—Z?>�/- �4' {1�.�,.%iiY�/�r(t�a��,./_ /„AA • 1 1 (�' V-Y�� �,vy645 I 4. 5. 6. �O Z� 7. 8. rr✓Y'�k /V 41 rA-r 9 10. Ll t-,kw) orti Renton 94- Zq4- 3a a3 Renton zc�& -�zz -113 x`Do ", 3 per.io„9sos4 Renton r7� /7 17741 113"7 n/ 5 1?�141 NP4 P/ s oZS 3 3.3 s S_ ►ii -23 Renton Renton Renton p r0, Renton �'e�C�r�iUa.r�U1�Gr4'^�J�,GOM 1 1-,.3 Renton Renton 2 010 • Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be ® GCC/IBT 933-M guilty of a misdemeanor. ,a� AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each how worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competentjurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per antrum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the workshe and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010, An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concems labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to howl). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. I£ any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: .ill #1 Date Canvassed: p vase -Email and Phone Number: , 1 2. 4. 5. N E Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: (D f-EcT 933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email S`UO Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org TO K'F N P IT 2Gn0 hvo kr1�,_L- f to l�2ck -&✓e- Renton I • AV' 4` ) I C (kM-epbm rnzz AvG 55 Renton 14yoY 176d� )12`' '��L— SL Renton 44ii 1 �g `l-( )/Z 1� Ave,'S' Renton cc 6 �'?z z /12�A,z 315 Renton / , � �1^ Renton 1 r�i Renton I cFe �� �(S((x I I 1 f I fa ue S ,�a� Renton 9. / �j� /ii d ��� l�y�P/� i Renton v1 10. k�e (� �,�, z'✓� 22�L1 $B°` lac 5 i"�'� �vs'r Reis. � -:271 `] �7 Date 4/10/2023 S�161z,S 51IbtZ3' S/1 b/z3 5 /161z3 5/l b! iZ.3 Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. A AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health cue while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January I thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following yew using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49,46,160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar yew, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar you, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but we not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation, For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that we uurelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clew and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2, The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees we employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. rr Bond Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date Sa`Uat� Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 Renton 2. lJ' (,��o- JI U IVI� I J i Renton 3. (II �� r UV � �l i'L ) I8 T I-LS 2(Q Renton S 2 4.� = 1� I�1� /all 5 7 �✓�i Renton 5.zz Rentonz5-��-�y37�tc✓✓/�°j 6. J rv- lac c� �-�-a Q �N� i_r '� L Renton L 1 3 7. Renton/W 8. � Z Renton 5--2-4 , •Z 7J 9. ^� l`�1� �G t�l`Renton P'�-2, Z\ ROT(() P Renton Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages. and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton,receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof, Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject. of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible hum due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: 1 2. 11 0 91 Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number city Phone Number Email Date Sa�Ceti % Printedn Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 lCw \P'U' C� 2le,o Wa5�i�1"V. S\vj_1' r/-2-7/Z3 � Renton c avm l� ,qeJ +S,0AN 9sb �� �1 s /2 -3 Renton 6�� �C Renton N f/ 3o � AiG �'J'f � �� 4 / ZRenton I S �Ic9 H C_ {' v1% l�{F1�(-E 56 1 �� Renton Z j_Z3 ��VotiN�- (�,�� /l ao N . 38 f1z Sf Renton ��c S; a09 , � lam, Renton cJ� -�e 5/vgA_3 Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. 67 AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (I) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each yew thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. I. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. I. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the workshe and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49,46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the. validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email S-?/0rm Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 1. j�'-' ' �"" _'Y""" t-kcrea S11AUft . — `I ,`e e Se- 2 3 11 5. 1.1 7 0 St+ANNON c.LAyTON o-�A S 31:5-1c-T- 0 1to'ir` 4W /V•j, Renton C360 [t1_4ntsl+utiK«^ �, U Renton i Renton Renton Date 4/10/2023 I. Coot 5 (36123 s/3o1 z3 5�3,%23 kl�u-� .515 QG/v✓lut.Q C6� 5%3v�Z �'eT� G �>n pia CotlG 9gfC�S 214b PL Renton 36C) 5Z3o9/o �� ?,t/ 171 S /% c,�.,vleSC Renton i 65/3d13 1oq3n SL' 73,jiq Ste? �l�f', ^ I �avYt Renton // (! S T Cty6lF� C, /'�/Il/E� ���llft�3233 Renton p(o (�-C�(oY;? S�3y%2 3 ST 7 Renton lioDt--in, zrHLnn1somvb17 J.'T6oU 107 " A,, , SC t 571r� Renton 513A/ - Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with newly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and has, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers me well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health cue, child cue, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health cue while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Delius ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and it. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. I. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but we not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter, the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisd iction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harn due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that we unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. I£ an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: I. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer, "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: ® aGCC/IBT 933-M ��4 WAPMPPIMP� We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email S `1/Or" Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org t 2. &J.S Va✓pa' 1 (1 "'/E Rantnn Renton nn/� v�i� 3. NI �1 Renton 4. 5 R Date 4/10/2023 r ' Z Ste` Zvz. Renton I� D usl� /1�l cTv� (,� V �S3 (� �j �� Renton 2 7. 8. a 10. tic 40o� ///*' PL SF Renton Renton (7k G I (J H, s} (j P Renton CA� (A1r�lr�( t' 4 �! �"✓l Renton l ( 6/7 Renton [IP /),,N7 S,�Zg,�Zu Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they me more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTaq Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTaq and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hoar. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and it. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hums, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the workshe and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license trader this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTaq 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 RM 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department most establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. 1 2 4. 5. 6. 7 N 10. „ � � Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton V/ INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: ®—ccc'naT 9 3 3 - M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Printed Name Street and Number city Phone Number Email Date 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 Renton SD C Renton 10 - a3 M�t�iL l/a fr Renton NC 2) S r J vi n / Nl ILfi��n I/1�. 9g� 5� Renton Z22S-�SG-Y%S2 � u5791Mo:1,-l0 s Z�j ov1 1��, � ��`� Renton "/�1/� �r I� D>G4/l OL✓-e Rentontf Renton 0 h n C O n l y I 23 6 i'r SE tj+fk Nw_Sr Renton 6 Ll 17 Renton `l0 `-//i S 2 77-_vd '�?1” Renton 323- `d3H-f q6s 0�lnc_63A,9mO1ii,Cow 5- /101Z 5�-1/I/2; Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, tenned CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee me in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current yen. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiving through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter, the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work horns when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that we unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: I. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees we employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 190 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject `concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Raising The Minimum Wage In -Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: ®�ccce�� 933-M a:Clll. We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 . p� kal�al� >4r4v �1jP/_ 1 Lw '7zS �yy--�� lJvS IJ-Pnfi Z/�/&=) VW/`4 E & Renton 2. / Renton S q 3. [ (iS _ 2`�Z Z lV1Cx��i 1 (� f� Renton 4.\i1�lld�' ��155� J(l �� 1� Renton V✓ r� (2 �� S. Renton 5.LLa 061 6. i / ���C ��Ca �J<Iwt�4 0� �2a ��f/-o� /1u� v� Renton �ZU6/ S�7 ✓zZ d S (O� 7- 7 O Renton s. � l � Renton/ �5 a / 9. _ Renton 10. 0 L.� ' SaS�� , (l �1� 151 to tom\ rn�Y� Q, �yt Nt Renton D(o T2 3 Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bus, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for thew family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Delius ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar yew in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous yea. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management C. Centralized control of labor relations; and it. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter, the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that we unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees me employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date s`110rm Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 1. bey 50L)(gr8 rev S�oW61r, J II�OS-SE I(z�G-hh PL Renton 5-n-23 2. lac- % /t w ✓ t l / �/ �� L� Renton 5 G % �S �j D �� C/ - s. fiqAt14 �as-fzSG, /3C0191 54� lo1l'5'�Si Renton 266-510 I J12.g/23 4. / �- G GnYla�l Qv�/QG� wy sE, 1�%�' P1 Renton (10k- G S Renton 6. G ` C l L �� �✓� Renton L �l _ v 7. ark S' l(�z /7 � Renton 1f9/797,3 LZ_3 8 Renton 9. (,>✓ �(G O /� S Renton /� �!'J�Zd (pJt��ri�� n �C.P � T(1 n Ii LLA- AI (646 Z Renton3to. �� Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and it. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competentjurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the workshe and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date SacurCe�/atrx Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 G Renton a�li �2V1 c IGJcUci , SPc1 c �n 13 %(. �� 5f Renton 5-6( 339 3017 r �e ►'1 b I 1 6 Z sd g Ne ` Renton l` l� vV G Renton dew kv�kln toxm' 4( �,ne��c aS�� �VL' � �, Renton has-�S'1�538 A&Pf- eu>01OA S�2S�a3 Renton �O�l/ �% fOi'l I)�VC�i�' Gtmi j7p� jC7�i23 S� �73r S Renton 4)5 2(�6-35-6V 10-WzZ i} l ✓eF RE14C----r-4 f 0833 5L 1 `T'6 5TT ! Renton .,1 V r 7 Ic I� lJ� E�}��� (cjg SF 17�j` =jT� Renton "� ` o oZ nl-old ul Y� F— e Vf Wl � 6(.- ►k o L�Z�f `jam` `ti Ui 1j5� % �0 5l`%� Renton � J � � Cc, C �l�i 1 `{a a0.(r� IM Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. ® <—&CE. 9 3 3 - M 'eaecaoneawvwwmc AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Lending shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. I, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($I) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. I. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof, Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar fors of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terns shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (I) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employeeg in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods; LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: x Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: ® CCCAD933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email 54MA&'?10&4 Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 5 6. 7.n. 8. 9. 10. Date 4/10/2023 0 S // T S (') ✓1 /V I eri' MAl) jr, 1(41_14 0'L � Renton I Renton _C' 2 Renton ��(_ Renton �?, 2uS �%g Renton Renton Renton Warning / / Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. J AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July I, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, me itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous yew For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; gun P P b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. I. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter, the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per arum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Pr Date Larger Email and Phom 40 Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date saw't&llater Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 /,? "1 0 2- 1. e'f� '�eevz-� eyvtju'o' �c Ccc �! cc �� dOZ 1��✓t��i SFS %�i� Renton z. TrVt-14V &ey jo-Ir0o;iK 4A( G. `/� 3. i 4. " �AmVi �l IGvm S 11 In 2 �� 5. 6. 7. s. 9. 10. Rd'f52o Z Renton Renton Renton �q c 4Ta diWX -7773 11.co►� S�Zf%z3 Clzw S/v8/v3 SfP(�y� e L7,ArtAr uo, 2 5C f�fIWI�try (�) D1e7 Renton s/2 z3 `ntsk;na� LaCade� Renton IioaZ se �za�,,as��l �� E)03 �s�; \c�cc e� c� m ) cs� 5 a16 23 C Renton Q.&t- ' ANcZDeracv 1002, SEPef'roV1.h Ied.aE2ot Renton Z3 P14- 1 J ter. Q /'�Cf13 I 2"1 7 YJL 5 L Renton V�so 1 k/�JjIS J1'Gtt�S e�G� �at�5 SCE I�j�,�` � �. Renton P0_br'ar)S_ e e1 '�'vA.hw,666-N Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts wound the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terns and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of my unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. S. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor, "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law, Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. �f Renton 52, vos eta,. I f NE_ Renton L v c IRyl co NU Renton .4L/% �� Soh r�vui / Renton 5k, j-�vl(*- \ I) � L` io\\�S V�rG Renton q 33. ' /XWL �S z3- zvZ2 5,-2-3 -2� Renton �►'�110� �l Q`'�`� 1,�,`�J qY`�O 1 I� CAL, S' a 3 Renton i1 Renton ((� 9. �f C= �t(n Renton �i (� I f s 23 23 10. / I\�`��� ��U�.� `1�� �I�J\� � a �\0 _�) Renton I���� �ni �a�a ci ' a 0 0\M(0 (7) 1z3/7,3 Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter, Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a goverment agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section S. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participmejointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If my clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: tAL�a,�l A DateCanvassed: Cis ZL�/Z_3 Canvasser Email and Phone Number: �'vGt.>Ps3't-Sus�Y at WL - Cu �- ? -5 -70 1�t8 � Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton 1 2. 3. 4. 5. 0 7 s 10 INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: p cccn'er 933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email S4MA&'?10rM Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 40 Renton -741'1 Ftau p Renton ZfZ��"1 A(CxiS NaU4Ln boo 24-br�rl PL Ni_ Renton �w IM, G( I" d � A0 Renton IQKW-:S(j k Z cv_*4 Alp? AVVUZJfiRenton Uo'y-Ies A„C),,I(I t d C� �ve 4 P?1 U Renton /O f �F_ zp,- S`+ Renton kki Date 4/10/2023 I •Cc3m �'`'/Ui/�j 'U�M& Renton I�V[��i�, I W�`k�Cb-/.,L- Renton Renton 1;0 I;/Lj !z3 Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers me well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified par -time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terns and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per arum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented, to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: I. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the Following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49,46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial par by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not quality as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be constmed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number city Phone Number Email Date Sa�uvke`Gaten Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 Renton aZ�'%►�'.�1 �f~�lOo1e✓I%�%c%l, alrvt, I.ca.� s/a�/�()zs 2. 3. 4.4t I 5. 6. Ir 7. 8. 9. Renton S7/2 -z f2 -_� Renton �d0 11 {� V / SL Renton _ LJ G. eA j Rento S/�agy-A (A < < `i Renton Noll ' �� q �� D%y Renton C COIL OL G11,Mra-t Renton cj/Z2 275 / TT e It , t� 1 �Q� Renton 9q()1 Renton Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be ®='GCGIBT.- 933-M guilty of a misdemeanor.' AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent, 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively; but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. I. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: I. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-timeemployment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work horns. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clew and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section S. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competentjurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per arum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC Y. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: r l and Phone Number: � d Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: ® fGCGIBT- 933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 1. c c�cICZ�J�zC \Z �()D fi 2Nt � /'V SRenton �S�Ss-7-�6yi �llu�7L d��� ; � %z3 2. � L eJ,N �a.� �"�0 S� I6 Renton yS�-F!04 OA 3 c �i .r-, I 1 7 Ave Ste' �SIOg Renton 4. C�� ` .. �_To � J� �y�� / Renton 5� Z'�/�-3 QL Renton — Z2,, 5. -2_rJ,2:2 6. !— 1 �2�STC LL �!v RentonZZ•Z3 ��/�, 7. ,, �,.ezv/i ¢� ��� :�Pj�.en� �1��/ Renton --- I � S„ s. NN,C11) C1Ud 0 S' S � R 308 QkAv\5 Ue Renton Ito S 9. ��W�t' � vWtS QW_r__ Renton I C I 10. 1 \ l ��V 1�'� -�n� l�\I� Vet Renton I� 7 �J) zz-J ,- Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, we itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: I. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hoary minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they me under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but we not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved parry of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because thew claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (I) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name W �Canvasser Email and Ph _ Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: ® GCCfleT-w-4 933-M 9BgACAMBMRtm"' We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date S"`UO Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 j f � * <j — a� - 9Po5' Renton 9--�3 ✓�c-- 2. gOS10 AnIGS '17 =-�� -1 I Renton 1=� I 1i" Renton3. 7Renton4. m � { Pn IdsY yL5 3ti�? 111 '',a� C/(A-4) 5. 5. — �\/� 1�I�4 r (l um 0 � -2311 J- !�j r% pI � Renton 7 S cGd 7�I 2 7.? Mai lam 23oS �� I3{ v% 7�,� �o-7-��y/��i 8. nton �ZS-ZSZ-gI� 9. �l)1's Vv0�1� �" J �1 �a1�13 :� � N� Renton GZ.� ' %S b� i� 10. ���" �.� ��� ��'� ��� Cb�t/i L6 Renton Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer of jobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health cue while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar yew will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they me underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve. any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section S. Enforcement. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: I. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is Name OCCanvassc hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, Date Canvasse restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. P,-ae, Email and Phone Number Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: ® iIeccnP933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 1. 1G - 41114 ,kCe., Hl 1 OZU PAUL Renton hlL4/2_6Z3 2. � n^� OSr^�^ 1C(C) i�"�(i^`?)i) A - Renton s/f zo r / r ilvc�_ 3. �//V�� Renton �J f,%V�-Lti �f1►�i��r' `' 4. �DP�.��l�t[�a�, _oY_" 9yf0'LJ�r` i1�L0SCi67"4 S�r��f Renton �2V'_75 .f0'"11SxoevL(V,c4L.ol,-5 s. 6. E 10. `f i r•l �ss I�GSS .mil 2 `/ ('rA i 2CI U'Lx- (/D��✓ �� ✓' V Renton Renton Renton ! Jc� Jr Renton Renton Renton y ;,t1r-Iq-a3 V(al-Z'� Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current yen. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hams if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time-and-a-halfor other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonearployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work horns, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competentjurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per antrum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in meant, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: l . A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2, The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek Feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: p acne 933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email S .% Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 1 o Sl a*v t 4s 4. 6. r �LAA (6�f N 9. 10. Renton Date 4/10/2023 Z ���, Z-,� G O 'naves ��/ Renton z53 - SS Zee 33Renton Renton pL Renton `A i A� I , Renton S�a oc e\JC,A s A�Q, Renton S IZZ/L3 v 30i Renton ,S / -2 sic SUJ"" Renton Renton Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Gordy Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bus, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they we underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The Factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of then availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section S. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competemjurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per arum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that we umelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bear; the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rates and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Email and Phone Number: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: p 4 -GcufP933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date S`U0 Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 Renton 2- .�% i'LC`, LJ/� U•��cL' c = J �� (�" � (� r� Renton -- G� Renton - v � N \\, ` £NF ` • � � I � 1p Renton Renton 9. 7 Y 10. QJC,k a. S ti 0411 ko-ir- 1�) �� 6S6�C-) -2� 1 8 cati t ,aS f n e ke; t1?'5Z \Ian �sot '�!c Renton Renton JO�W1 . LCV kA A?P-_n &oo Sv l S n ( Cr A '; 3 .3 D 1 Renton Cf� r�N Pay ti��Pz C�T� s io s sa, ACT S ZoG Renton S / /w23 S Vy sl z zl 2-3 s/2$/23 j&fi Avl�nc, z •�5 ,,,,1�. �� Renton Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. 4 AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. I. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they straggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to team in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each yew thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. S. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: I. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but me not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employmem, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section S. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible hamr due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per woman or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief, 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date sD�O Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 1. � �c(\54\-� 15 3. 900h�d S 4. UW VV5. ' 6. 0, Ga l to wit u 9 F� 9 ti 016 ov\VA 6Q � O `6 l ao1`j Renton Renton Renton yr\�l S_( � � Af4' Renton �\ �a 6 66� s I Renton rd S f Renton 5.tt �'T Renton Renton Renton G":lO. - y- 47. - v 10. �/� �".1/ UIC'�(� % ��2�1 yv l� S Ze A0k� Renton Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. ®<�933.M AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTae, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school, Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following yen using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current yew. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar yen will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. I. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonablejudgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. I. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per antrum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter we cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) yews. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees me employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means acovered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date S 1�'� Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 Renton 2. � /� D S/- � Renton �< /. � 511oll l'i,� ! �z� Sc= ��� s /�za,ohnJ� 3. b�1� �?y �g/� Renton S11v(zx i 4. Q�r `� ����~ ` Renton P/�e D�J Renton �n��Q s. Renton 7.rya.4al V -�2onr0 � Renton2/ 71�1 Renton a6Z 13 Renton 3'(D0 39 9 Z 34-. 3 io. V �, CQ'`m ��lr �. 7�L�'� NP xcctt� qsr,�� flS Renton (o200 6�1 9 1 gl 5 (2-2J(2?-,� Warning Ever person who signs this petition with an other than his or her true name or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families am insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of worker by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($I) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar yew will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate order any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected order this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the workshe and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) yews. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director order this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject `concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email S� ti�A ��� Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 1. 2. 3.� 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. R "" I'l 0-&A �kUV\ �; U l ':�_ �\j C� �C S I "CSC Renton 4 M )f S� Renton �ar1 / ✓ ( S I C..(- "` 'mil W�1i h� Renton `W���V f Renton �Il l���{ (r/I/� �Q� f�l�% �l✓�if�3 Renton S0Renton Renton CA) _W7/mil ,c —L& OX)la) A /J•c, A'r5;' - lC:& Renton Date 4/10/2023 ,5 Z� �3 fRenton S ; Renton 5lr"2§4)0_L� Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the. historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer o£jobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working Families can insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46,160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, we itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have FairAccess to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter, the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the workshe and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage odtside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees we employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer, "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the detennination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If my clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: o ,scenar 933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email 5400& `/Orm Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org t. & 6rgA DeovlG) Stbor�l� b�ni 2. 3. a/ G 6. 7 91 2-2-0a�2 I/'111/a Renton )Y30l 1,19-X L,-, Renton ST-k� S� Renton F-Br� zc' - /Ott, tie Renton Date 4/10/2023 S -/--z, r Renton Mviol' a La N J ell 10. CO— � 5 Ra'�A uj" 5Z.A 1 aibo+- E4 r1 E51 al Renton Renton 207 V"If/Y rf ��j J Renton j-�_Z4 lo. Renton Renton I? I/O 3 15 / 12-3 Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent thew ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. I. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter•, the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter, However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation order this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director most deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 RM 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton 1. 2.� 3.G 4. 5. j 6. 7. 8. 9. 10 tr INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date 51`U Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 P �YA r' 0 Br) Q�'ti +i S w' Vtlrms Renton r� Renton Renton 2 °'1Z c)7 � g+V'� a% VC, 3 Renton /ai Ly Jc zyz-1 PL Renton �� �A*6'f Renton o ooi/Z7 %63 r-,.t(v&4S floc_ 136(Jt 01/ tjd t'J_5 Renton �Qn +n Renton ..1A ave Renton liz 951 A02`1 8 " J N _ Renton (n - S -6..-22 Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. a ® -FOGG /I T- 933-M 'PAMAfA019MPPS � AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child cue, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Newby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established trader Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($I) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof, Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements o£RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010, An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. - "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49,46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be constmed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt mles and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rates and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: j Date Canvassed: . and Phone umber: set Email N ` ---- -- Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: ® cccn9r 933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for him If or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. \Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email s4off#&?/orec Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org t. 'VUw[ 2. p 3. 4. 5. i 6. ��- 7. 8. 9. 10. cASA'RNcro iC�_ �t,wl `mirk+tMs ME S �i32 Sr h s AIQ ll bZ 'Sr— rr�e cs AJe ­3 'I' 7- S�else S A Y� �5 0 7� */10 S 7 `' 0�'/2 S G�10,1, Lti Renton Renton Renton nton Re Renton Renton Date 4/10/2023 z u--1,o `V1/A '3/Zs '5l3 /Z. 3 A/ A 5/z3 Warning 1.</,r Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. 1 AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section I. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child cue, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Farmers and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City, 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees timing all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity, 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter, the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter, 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. it. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer, "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rainmaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rates and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 RM 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser Date Canvassed r . Email and Phone Number: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7., 8. 9. 10. INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date samAec`10&4 Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 Renton V11 fu St Renton Renton �"l��i3�i ��ytcL c /�Z�� 46b S—lPlZ3 Renton Renton -5 -G —2-3 Lo /(? 3 LG � Renton PSI Ie 1P'U'" I 3 3 �G �Q Lf^1 .j Renton 7 Ztl>_- ( 1 g-3,��,l oZ� Renton L S 5 3c�' 1 Ed- ' Renton `�t . C� g ( �/6 12 Renton Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. ®""BT "' "' AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health cue, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Newby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Eamers and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per arum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more. employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. it. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49,46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: I. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees me employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. - "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in _ recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 RM 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: ®—cccner 933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email saoo&'vorer Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4A Kar, 2. 3. Aon Is N fA/W ovos Ave Nl 10,0( 0Renton S� �17�3n6�1� +-h AM Renton Renton Renton Renton Renton 7. �l_ (1�2rz �Ol �tsS� (y (l �j (Q r 1 157, Renton a N t O'- Wl1)�V�/Oj?Nj nvt S Renton Date 4/10/2023 5-131z3 5312/au p ✓V( <' �, )— h 7 7 S Renton ��s/Z7 A �/ �!4j 4 � � e �9 �'i�l' i� CP k4//U�c i °l �� Renton /3/5 Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following yew using the annual rate of inflation, 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar yew, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, par -time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current yew. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. I. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with.a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hums when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved partyof up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in meant, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that we unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of anions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. - "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "How worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees we employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of someservice performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance we declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Di vasser Email and Ph Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton 2. 3. a 5. INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: ®�cccner 933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Sa"O&% 4 alftPrinted Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org )Z \ S \Af�' 0^ ` Renton Renton j z Sl�� f �� ✓� Renton Imo` \ V Za 2 4 U "► IQ\ Renton I N�Gve S �� ZZGf��Zt'S Renton �t6 i - �i y� mv ,A 10. 6N (-Z ME Renton Renton Renton Renton Date 4/10/2023 —2-�z 5 Z3 4r -`% _Z-3 0A 013 -3 Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who Knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health cue while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, Scalise, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per how. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but we not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and it. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter, the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section S. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competentjwisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clew and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2, The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees we employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate, "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rates and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns tabor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance we declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Nat Vasser Email and 41 Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: p i ccener 933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date SaHy:Fe`Uot�r Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 1 SL (, LalZ-e Renton JF 23 2. 1 Renton 6l3 �J Am I( ZJ' I fI �� sG�'I/�jpZay Renton l 4. C�k1� L��� %K� 9 ��vv1 0 Renton ! Renton 6. i y v- 1 j dd Z I �o�AV e Renton 3 2-3 7. • /� Renton s.lN 1\Cfo \� Renton 9. V��i�tnx—� �nr )E1 Z )L,- ��r KEGS i�� �4 tt P . a1 r�<rc e' Renton 10._I./�-1 (IOI�IRI�o✓I fix^ unto ������ Renton Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to team in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following yew using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July I, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($I) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but we not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and it. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right trader this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section S. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competentjurisdiction against the employer or other person violating thischapterand, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point timing the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because thew claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter me cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: I. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: vasser Email and Phone Number: 2 3 4. 5. 6. 7 Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date SaajiCe`U°ten Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 N 20"A✓P,1tP� 6)zoS4 Renton 173 : dl,oi.��i 6D$ S Renton41 Jv534r c�1nJ�Yl r } �02�( j>J�t12��f}(2Gj. Renton �2SZ2%3ZZ0 - 3' a3 F-�LAPL Renton IYuS�rUA I��� <j�ddG� Renton -� 60 OB �y�i�- Vl;`111I.1(JcMSkfono\08i� 91rna:l.com✓_�-2 /3Yet5- AlzE Renton Renton 8. �Ji�n t � l i �� � C9`i � e� % Uri Renton 9. k 10. i(" N � I b tAW -Jr f/VK,( 5' Renton C Renton 6-4 G - y-a? Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. 933-M AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts mound the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide away of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers we well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each yew thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Eamers and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and _ b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar yew, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment.. - 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for apermissible Purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid Wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory. damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. - - 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and c. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that me unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, includingall hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject `concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: ® cccn'er 933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date Saiee?/°tic7-Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 t r- �� tV'�� �� Renton G������ lAi1L �00�d M ry ... s Gl�( L L Cr5 Lit Renton �� I IC / r I I� I i �. C l —'l.0 Renton zs Renton 4 °LGL� le /s2� ` Y / ill �%✓�5`�Li9 sUi �.� Renton 5 I Z y / Renton a — / f �/ l/ Renton z� - F� , 4 Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts mound the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child cue, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Newby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health cue while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Eamers and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hardly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar yew in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar yew, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities shore common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but me not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nanemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a goverment employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per anuum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19,52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees we similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. S. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3, Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvas Date Canvassed: vasser Email and Phone Number: 1. 2. 40 Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature s tiar'n Printed Name Printed Name Street and Number 1234 Anywhere St. 76 kus' S City Phone Number Renton 206-555-1234 Renton CA Renton I-Ipls lob ` 1'I 5 - Renton �K--TfOO Redrov fIPTFZCE5 Renton /b(0/ Vc(�Gt�t 6 Z_ f 5Z R67) hao Lc I-4 ' _j Ll 61 u SE /&-7 rJ Renton Renton Renton 3513 Wa11s Avc 5 1,erAon1W Renton o 7 fh', Renton Renton Email maria@something.org lkkrx nc4 Amynf( Date 4/10/2023 S(36m 5/3T/Z3 (� g eon a�w�� � ai{ . Cv✓11 ��� c) Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. —3o—ti3 AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January I thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Arco Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section S. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonablejudgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competentjurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter, Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require, Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terns shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refiieling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email saoo& zoaz Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org ✓, bbUl �)f 11`" A*_A� (CIA Renton Z� - 2-W- - c I�- U, I (/h111) I I IAA JhP C% Renton 9p, 9^-eP PR rd I ,�1' i-1-( l WV,<' �V a /?3i0 /1 R16lwC Pa/l&.<4 'Zak ` P/ sf Renton 2p(�-2q3—S4�4� Corncx'Sh Renton Renton ZCkD - LFDi.- Renton Renton Renton Renton r Date 4/10/2023 5/,30 3b fez S Z3 S-9(D.2& s/3617.z Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child cue, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar yew will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonablejudgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about then rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section S. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury w a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competentjurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070; m well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. S. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. Cityof SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: r Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email S ` &T Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 1 0 3. G 0 7 I E 10. V_f'jlw- IL-t'Ct7 T ,Q-c 1 L _ KG n 3?_ I64 3E YZkA,+V"1`- Renton `w 1h Renton Renton Date 4/10/2023 s I o� ) 23 s 5 /% FIZ3 v 0CG )7658 110' SK Renton/tom fa g 1i�82% L �3' f SAM�4kWDI A�rV MrAPA� ,4 110 ' �v� S Renton 5�%1 23 131 ✓ ccyU %�y`�ct r�-a5� V7� Z8 ) lOfi� �V� cJ G Renton 5 t7 ► $l7/� Renton Renton 1-1 C:�57 I10-,-"" av e- S- R_ Renton Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts mound the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bus, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health cue, child cue, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1, Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49,46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section S. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar yew, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but we not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter•, the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter, the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competentjurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clew and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton 1. 2. 3. 4. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10 INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISI>ION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date Sa1zFe`Uot�z Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 Renton Renton S r� oko"Lj A/A� 1 L l -� Renton 2 ,Tm Gig i (Z 6�� viv tJ v Renton �� Renton C)7/P a3 Renton S 13) 3N3 Renton 5Zi 1 )3 Pam Jl. Renton Rn/�-� om' V V�LU-�-'aiv Renton 'e r ll Q Renton L% Wcrning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who tnowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. ° ;= ' 933-M' AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($I) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. L Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, icluding hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer addif ( nal hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have he skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action mews denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a govenunent employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. .5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter, However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close orthe 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply �o any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees me similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and c. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. Him employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5.5.4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise Fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject `concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser .K. Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: p %Esccne_ 933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email S"O&I/Oror Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234` maria@something.org a . „ � �C yilj�c f)shl I'D V v k-f---9 N o l A/15-0 Renton l�23e 1�J�'4vp S,:E 4X35 T'At w- 4. f �< Renton Date 4/10/2023 Renton 1L�t t%YIA 17u � � - I1 - 2A Renton trm_�� V l V sin lkpt ( jOL Renton 2i^^ " G - a'"f'U✓6I +V' C44 Debra. Womoc-p- "13 NE UV1--PL 1 6; 09 Pkv, te/cy Ave 2321n We, _7"� c)\ Renton Renton Renton E, Renton Renton Z i •Griyv� �)/0/2,3 Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient intone due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child cue, and groceries, and they me more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation, 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: I. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July I, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established order Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. I. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and it. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter, the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. I. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. I£ an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. S. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: I. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance me declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: cc. 933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES {ry A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. C/ Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date Sa�y:Ze2i°try Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 ). �ahma Y►tC�Vh�L� U15SW ST" PL P—e Wj� q;s659Renton 206-6o6-3(4(Al 120Z3 2. Renton �I Za2 3.1� svw,vl l,�Ol �� Renton NC i—M ST 9$-DS Renton �Jy 3 5. �O� Gvlc. �seYvl �� pivv III aot lib �ti ��05� Renton ���I 43 1/1\/A 6. 1 7. 8. 9. 0 k�_VIY)SOA f (3S SVJ)Q� N-J, . 5� G ,r,)7f Renton Renton 5k/;9 r Skzk)1d �i Renton�Lcf Renton C./ Warping Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensue access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per how. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each how worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual grass revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. I. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a. family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class,of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competentimisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per woman or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clew and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hows). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 2. 3. 4. D 0 1 6. �IM Vl� ' J Dl Renton Renton �ts •. U( 35 IC �0�} �d S Renton Renton Renton �3a4 iv 2a F"- S 1 ro Renton 7. t/Wj6tt"� �t VIVA N- Renton 8. / IV IU�' �� t �al�l�i l� Z�jOZ v�s�b,� c-F fV� Renton 9. PVO" (C v(A) A1j�Jr Renton 10. /� X /�/t 4�t "'�lj�`� i Renton - (orb - � G Date 4/10/2023 5-//6AV03 Sal b 12L2s 5�l eJ23 Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. Z3 l6/z� AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers we well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families am insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Eamers and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Pbase-In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and it. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiving additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter, 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that we unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined m set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 Pad 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: p —cccner— 933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email S400&-1/crez Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org �4kn Pq IBM SHE,,, I M r. 10, i, Rut 6 3 3 //'-tom; M 131 36 l 70 ( vJ -'•\j G I AUK- N 3q5 <9l/y AV'C tm -fy-( t Renton��vd�h Renton w10IcS5rs✓���r vI Renton Renton Lunn; � Renton Renton CAWfQ.l Am,SLtg N' i[.QN Renton Renton G� � i '� j . L7GLy Gh� ei ln'lL't. r! • C b vt t Renton Date 4/10/2023 5-1C !25 57a Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. �71ZS AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington. State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts mound the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Newby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health cue while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of thew location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous yew. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the cilrent year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they me underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but we not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but we not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter, the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due. to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clew and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter me cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees we employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 RM 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: ® cccnor 933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number city Phone Number Email Date S`U0 Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 S 44 �� � ���, nif� Renton z. I ^1� vv �, l\. u�� (� {�(�I�� � Renton 3. Renton 6 4. 5 '� C1 ��s vi�nAa 5 Renton >J�e a s KI- �.---,` � c v L 1- 71�+ 36 2 Z �� Renton S-5 2 3 s. 6. l�L �� a�- S N� ��t S �3�3 Renton f- �%3 �. 5 . �� a �� f2 Renton -—� J s. ' SGf�n /f?')�01 ��ZS �� Renton 9. �� ��c� Z b Y�xlo �I��Z f�v{'�S�u1�kv V-"- Renton 72 10. tfV ,l� �lYi� �-60n� N t Renton Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. l . The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to - the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families can insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health cue, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter, the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competentjurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection; or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: ®—scen'e;-- 933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email S?/ Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org V 2. cj C,q Nk Renton = c.`Z _ `Y, - i-7 j•`j_ Renton qDS 3. fly' t.GPJv�� �z�nn I�L� �r{�r��C� i Z'� U! i\ J� �•rP(l�D(1 Renton r. �4.•� �<� f .,: �,^� Renton S t r! a S17 0IgU6\10 ��7G ifl? /(/. Renton jo5. KI pG4"Y' Q 6. ow_P_o 6 ex, Renton Renton 7. I i[n.�/I I ArvL hANEY 7_ ._,�''�, T4.,.r/ Date 4/10/2023 Q IIve.cz�'.\ S (-2 ID3 Ras o gNcilkc k6l� CoPo9RP q K-a� ), cap `5/7 Renton aK I ] s _� tI JARI ME Cir Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. 7 91 AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts wound the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer of jobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers me well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1., 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but we not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right toinform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section S. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney Fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved patty was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per arum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar fors of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. or Name Di 111asser Email and Ph 410 Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: ® fe0 933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date Saoo&`U0ft Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 l) �� Renton 2.-^ 3. Renton Renton '�L l) ; r� j w✓V`>' ., �y P, �� Renton �t� SfP� � �irY'a+'we, wi�LuLtnl S .� 3.ZJ 9. 0 T�'F_ " Ps&'4,� 10. 4 -�. � IIsheu�ex 0 Renton Renton Renton /z Renton Renton >U� f a �-Y' HAtZ'�ifcC'76 N 'N"L tcL Renton _;l3 la3 5/ S/2 Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health cue, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiving new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January I thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minim=wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position, The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that me unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter me cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terns shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: p GCC/IBT 933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date Saan/rfc?yorrh Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 li�tA SYI/ Renton G1—`{30-�35 21�.�ti �i Mail C 1 2UZQj 2 t I �SCNLrZ �%� Renton ���iy 7� �� OSd� 1 � � 7 3. i�'b ( S L6ol S� �51 Renton .(O ge3 M` �feVq''2 (0 12`em 6Z 4 \ .SZ (�i� � lPl Renton �7/7 C Renton 5. 0 9 I q re CR, ,clF Renton / /J , Renton Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. _, AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they we more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Eamers and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per how. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are underjoint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management C. Centralized control of labor relations; and it. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competentjmisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per arum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point timing the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other mews of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: I. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date sa'HA&-?/Orin Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 HAvctiCz P cIiNN 1. pa'-_ C1"-"' _ ! l c t z j 9-- (a'­rr-/:P, < Renton Sl3°12-3 T14y O ORN(o Renton 3 3 y<) l�le15T01�1dSR M �l'iz.GL`� 10�035G lgLl�� �14zoLt J �rf`j — � Renton S/3t7�Zt�= �Q l r'r / r / /— Renton i 3 ��� �,a�J Sl3d/2 4. AUNAvO Y� (Sevw�,�i Osto3 SL5 le;9"L' 41Hlb3 Z53-56t-37-OH —� Sd (I�o-' GN G to3 s. rralA/YtQ�) stt �l�n � q�d19 Renton J�3o�Z3 6 gRenton �og� It44,� c.s N-ol � 3 oFrc� 7. wjh%y� I6V� 1n/�` �865s Renton 2 olo 7Sl o �611Z3 IOVL? SF, [204A Flo 8. cl lca �eou�- zr,-toh WA Rga Renton 51C)-9Li(�ly�%�l 9130103 Athi Pi fu On 9. Vn' f i L J Renton C7 O Z� 10. T4,44 ;qt6� 1956 (r(41�i� Gq/� Sr�3 Renton c04- S .9"02.Z S �0t'z2 Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families cam insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January I thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. S. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee we in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous yew. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter•, the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the workshe and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participatejointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46,010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt roles and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject `concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 793, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number:. Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date Sake`Uotva Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 5e 7� Renton "3 3 � Ia 2. - Ag'el'k'a &'h"ee, 16�'7331 lar9, lw SF Renton 3. Suzan ��uY, � 1g73? lo`(`LhJe Renton 300-77�-(o�� SUun,SumF�3�5 . `CAJUm �,9737 IU9A� Lo S Renton .61-3(7- 1 307 S/2�%2'� Renton 6. "li✓ Lj N po W f/C( l�Y /060V f{i Renton 93& �Jf 44 62 / 7. � �, -� HE, / C /%En/ J y' s"� jg L. �% � �-u � Renton �8� z7/ 3v� � 8. ��M Aiown;� Elqevs>. loazz. se Renton 9. 9A� i�U1Z,GUt �7Ut�lv�— (OGlB �E �`d?' L:�U Renton 10. ( `e Renton Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent, 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January I thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($I) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonablejudgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. I. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or their job titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. S. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade name, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section H. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvassed: Canvasser Email and Phone Number: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email Date saHoFz`U Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org 4/10/2023 2. 3. L'1sa J-fi61/i f' �////g o4 r OQ 3d Renton ''a—g67-EV03 11 sa al?a Ada 75'c Renton �o7.,Z-/077 i9L Renton Renton s/311 5 -5-. 7/ 07 5. k/ JUsk \n Jg'�L'-5 (IOl°I $F Ig�th 5+ Renton )p(d 3d %(Sy-')Mjr)_0<6 sly t /3,-5 6 W r'j� � (�' � (J � SE i5 tdlVv J�. Renton �il� " 1 � "Ql�v � C71 �2 ) 7 a 1 (% Renton 58I / 9 IK7" �� Renton (M1 117110 /, F.t)/r'%4 / 0 7 17 F7 7% Renton Renton �LaG�'����� 5- 3/. Z3 5M 9 Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largest job centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts mound the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with nearly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide array of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they struggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. S. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but until now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to team in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49,46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and it. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying ajob or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of the person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof. Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter. Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. d. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according. to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See Filo Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances. Name Of Canvasser: Date Canvasser Email and Phone Number: Raising The Minimum Wage In Renton 1. 2. 4. s. 6. 10. INITIATIVE PETITION FOR SUBMISSION TO THE RENTON CITY COUNCIL TO: The City Council of the City of Renton: ® GCC/IB7 933-M We, the undersigned registered voters of the City of Renton, State of Washington, residing at the addresses set forth opposite our respective names, being equal to fifteen percent (15%) of the total number of names of persons listed as registered voters within the City on the day of the last preceding City general election, respectfully request that the following ordinance be enacted by the City Council or, if not so enacted, be submitted to a vote of the residents of the City. The title of the said ordinance is as follows: ORDINANCE CONCERNING LABOR STANDARDS FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES A full, true and correct copy of the ordinance is attached to this Petition. Each of us for himself or herself says: I have personally signed this petition; I am a registered voter of the City of Renton, State of Washington; and my residence is correctly stated. Signature Printed Name Street and Number City Phone Number Email S `verm Printed Name 1234 Anywhere St. Renton 206-555-1234 maria@something.org Renton r Renton 1 Renton 91 ► a on r � o Renton Renton r - Renton -f�mcv"" Date 4/10/2023 �i Z o7,3 23 5/7d/o� Warning Every person who signs this petition with any other than his or her true name, or who knowingly signs more than one of these petitions, or signs a petition seek- ing an election when he or she is not a legal voter, or signs a petition when he or she is otherwise not qualified to sign, or who makes herein any false statement, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. AN ORDINANCE concerning labor standards for certain employees. Section 1. Findings. 1. The people of the City of Renton hereby adopt this citizen initiative addressing labor standards for certain employees, for the purpose of ensuring that, to the extent reasonably practicable, people employed in Renton have good wages and access to sufficient hours of work. 2. The City of Renton is one of the largestjob centers in Washington State, with thousands of shoppers and workers visiting daily to participate in the local economy. Renton is home to The Landing shopping center, the historic Downtown Urban Center, as well as retail and commercial office and warehouse districts around the Rainier/Grady Way Junction. The City is a net importer ofjobs, with newly 60,000 employed workers. Renton has a wide may of both long established and new and evolving business sectors. Retail businesses, restaurants and bars, auto sales, hospitality, healthcare, and office workers are well represented. 3. The statewide minimum wage is not sufficient to afford rising rents and costs of living in Renton. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition's Out of Reach 2022 report, a worker making Washington's minimum wage would have to work 72 hours each week (up from 70 hours each week in 2021) to afford a modest one -bedroom rental home at Fair Market Rent. 4. When working families earn insufficient income due to low wages and involuntary under -employment, they straggle to pay for basic necessities like health care, child care, and groceries, and they are more likely to be evicted and become homeless. 5. Nearby King County cities of SeaTac, Seattle, and Tukwila enacted higher minimum wages in 2013, 2014, and 2022 respectively, but will now Renton has not followed suit. 6. Children growing up in poverty experience insecurity with housing, nutrition, and health care while enduring other hardships that prevent their ability to learn in school. Full time working parents must be able to reasonably provide for their family to ensure access to the opportunities and promise of public education. Section 2. Intent. It is the intent of the people to establish fair labor standards and protect the rights of workers by: (1) ensuring that the vast majority of employees in the City of Renton receive a minimum wage comparable to employees in the nearby cities of Tukwila, SeaTac, and Seattle; (2) requiring covered employers to offer additional hours of work to qualified part-time employees before hiring new employees to fill those hours; and (3) adopting enforcement requirements. Section 3. Large Employers Shall Pay Minimum Wages Comparable to Those in Nearby Cities. 1. Effective July 1, 2024, every large employer shall pay to each employee an hourly wage of not less than the 2023 new minimum wage rate in the City of Tukwila, established by City of Tukwila Initiative Measure No. 1, approved by voters in November 2022, adjusted for 2024 by the annual rate of inflation. 2. On January 1, 2025, and on each January 1 thereafter, the hourly minimum wage shall increase by the annual rate of inflation to maintain employee purchasing power. 3. By December 31, 2023, and by October 15 of each year thereafter, the Finance Department shall establish and publish the applicable hourly minimum wage for the following year using the annual rate of inflation. 4. For purposes of this chapter, the annual rate of inflation means 100 percent of the annual average growth rate of the bi-monthly Seattle -Tacoma -Bellevue Area Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, termed CPI-W, for the 12-month period ending in August, provided that the percentage increase shall not be less than zero. 5. An employer must pay to its employees: a. All tips and gratuities; and b. All service charges as defined under RCW 49.46.160 except those that, pursuant to RCW 49.46.160, are itemized as not being payable to the employee or employees servicing the customer. Tips and service charges paid to an employee are in addition to, and may not count towards, the employee's hourly minimum wage. Section 4. Other Covered Employers Shall Have a Multiyear Phase -In Period. Other covered employers shall phase in the new minimum wage, as follows: 1. Effective July 1, 2024, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus Two Dollars ($2) per hour. 2. Effective July 1, 2025, other covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3 minus One Dollar ($1) per hour. 3. Effective July 1, 2026, and thereafter, all covered employers shall pay employees not less than the hourly minimum wage established under Section 3. Section 5. Coverage and Employer Classifications. 1. Covered employers must pay employees at least the minimum wage established by this chapter for each hour worked within the City. 2. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the average number of employees during all weeks in the previous calendar year in which the employer had at least one employee. For employers that did not have any employees during the previous calendar year, classification will be based upon the average number of employees during the most recent three months of the current year. In this determination, all employees will be counted, regardless of their location, and including employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment, temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity. 3. Employer classification for the current calendar year will be calculated based upon the gross revenue for the previous year. For employers that did not have gross revenue during the previous calendar year, annual gross revenue will be calculated from the gross revenue during the most recent three months of the current year. 4. For the purposes of employer classification, separate entities will be considered a single employer if they form an integrated enterprise or they are under joint control by one of those entities or a separate entity. The factors to consider in making this assessment include, but are not limited to: a. Degree of interrelation between the operations of multiple entities; b. Degree to which the entities share common management; C. Centralized control of labor relations; and d. Degree of common ownership or financial control over the entities. Section 6. Part -Time Employees Shall Have Fair Access to Additional Hours. 1. Before hiring additional employees or subcontractors, including hiring through the use of temporary services or staffing agencies, covered employers must offer additional hours of work to existing employees who, in the employer's good faith and reasonable judgment, have the skills and experience to perform the work, and shall use a reasonable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory process to distribute the hours of work among those existing employees. 2. This section shall not be construed to require any employer to offer an employee work hours if the employer would be required to compensate the employee at time -and -a -half or other premium rate under any law or collective bargaining agreement, nor to prohibit any employer from offering such work hours. Section 7. Retaliation Prohibited. 1. No employer or any other person shall interfere with, restrain, or deny the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. 2. No employer or any other person shall take any adverse action against any person because the person has exercised in good faith the rights under this chapter. Such rights include but are not limited to the right to make inquiries about the rights protected under this chapter; the right to inform others about their rights under this chapter; the right to inform the person's employer, union, or similar organization, and/or the person's legal counsel or any other person about an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to bring a civil action for an alleged violation of this chapter; the right to testify in a proceeding under or related to this chapter; the right to refuse to participate in an activity that would result in a violation of city, state, or federal law; and the right to oppose any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter. 3. For the purposes of this section, an adverse action means denying a job or promotion, demoting, terminating, failing to rehire after a seasonal interruption of work, threatening, penalizing, retaliating, engaging in unfair immigration -related practices, filing a false report with a government agency, changing an employee's status to nonemployee, decreasing or declining to provide additional work hours when they otherwise would have been offered, scheduling an employee for hours outside of their availability, or otherwise discriminating against any person for any reason prohibited by this chapter. "Adverse action" for an employee may involve any aspect of employment, including pay, work hours, responsibilities, or other material change in the terms and conditions of employment. 4. No employer or any other person shall communicate to a person exercising rights protected under this chapter, directly or indirectly, the willingness to inform a government employee that the person is not lawfully in the United States, or to report, or to make an implied or express assertion of a willingness to report, suspected citizenship or immigration status of person or a family member of the person to a federal, state, or local agency because the person has exercised a right under this chapter. 5. There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer or any other person takes an adverse action against a person within 90 days of the person's exercise of any right protected in this chapter. However, in the case of seasonal work that ended before the close of the 90-day period, the presumption also applies if the employer fails to rehire a former employee at the next opportunity for work in the same position. The employer may rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence that the adverse action was taken for a permissible purpose. 6. Standard of Proof Proof of retaliation under this chapter shall be sufficient upon a showing that an employer or any other person has taken an adverse action against a person and the person's exercise of rights protected in this chapter was a motivating factor in the adverse action, unless the employer can prove that the action would have been taken in the absence of such protected activity. 7. The protections afforded under this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith alleges violations of this chapter. Section 8. Enforcement. 1. Any person or class of persons that suffers financial injury as a result of a violation of this chapter or is the subject of prohibited retaliation under this chapter, or any other individual or entity acting on their behalf, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer or other person violating this chapter and, upon prevailing, shall be awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs and such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including, without limitation, the payment of any unpaid wages plus interest due to the person and liquidated damages in an additional amount of up to twice the unpaid wages; compensatory damages; and a penalty payable to any aggrieved party of up to $5,000 if the aggrieved party was subject to prohibited retaliation. For the purposes of this section, an aggrieved party means an employee or other person who suffers tangible or intangible harm due to an employer or other person's violation of this chapter, Interest shall accrue from the date the unpaid wages were first due at the higher of twelve percent per annum or the maximum rate permitted under RCW 19.52.020. 2. For purposes of determining membership within a class of persons entitled to bring an action under this section, two or more employees are similarly situated if they: a. Are or were employed by the same employer or employers, whether concurrently or otherwise, at some point during the applicable statute of limitations period; b. Allege one or more violations that raise similar questions as to liability; and C. Seek similar forms of relief. it. Employees shall not be considered dissimilar solely because their claims seek damages that differ in amount, or theirjob titles or other means of classifying employees differ in ways that are unrelated to their claims. 3. Each covered employer shall retain records as required by RCW 49.46.070, as well as such information as the City may require to confirm compliance with this chapter. If an employer fails to retain such records, there shall be a presumption, rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence, that the employer violated this chapter for the periods and for each employee for whom records were not retained. 4. Employers shall permit authorized City representatives access to work sites and relevant records for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the chapter and investigating complaints of noncompliance, including production for inspection and copying of employment records. The City may designate representatives, including city contractors and representatives of unions or worker advocacy organizations, to access the worksite and relevant records. 5. Complaints that any provision of this chapter has been violated may also be presented to the City Attorney, who is hereby authorized to investigate and, if they deem appropriate, initiate legal or other action to remedy any violation of this chapter. 6. The City has the authority to issue administrative citations and to order injunctive relief including reinstatement, restitution, payment of back wages, or other forms of relief. 7. The City may, in the exercise of its authority and performance of its functions and services, agree by contract or otherwise to participate jointly or in cooperation with Washington State, King County, or any city, town, or other incorporated place, or subdivision thereof, or engage outside counsel, to enforce this chapter. 8. The remedies and penalties provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available remedies or penalties, including existing remedies for enforcement of Renton Municipal Code chapters. 9. The statute of limitations for any enforcement action shall be five (5) years. Section 9. A new section is added to Renton Municipal Code (RMC) Section 5-5-4 as follows: 1. The Finance Director may deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for violation of this ordinance. 2. The Finance Director must deny, suspend, or revoke any license under this chapter for repeated intentional violations of this ordinance. 3. Any action by the Finance Director under this section shall be subject to the procedures and requirements of RMC subsection 5-5-3.E, as well as other due process rights that a court may require. Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: "City" means the City of Renton. "Covered employer" means an employer that either (1) employs at least 15 employees regardless of where those employees are employed, or (2) has annual gross revenue over $2 million. "Effective date" is the effective date of this ordinance. "Employee" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. An employer bears the burden of proof that the individual is, as a matter of economic reality, in business for oneself rather than dependent upon the alleged employer. "Employer" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. "Employer classification" includes the determination of whether an employer is a covered employer and whether a covered employer is a large employer. "Franchise" means an agreement, express or implied, oral or written by which: 1. A person is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling, or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan prescribed or suggested in substantial part by the grantor or its affiliate; 2. The operation of the business is substantially associated with a trademark, service mark, trade time, advertising, or other commercial symbol; designating, owned by, or licensed by the grantor or its affiliate; and 3. The person pays, agrees to pay, or is required to pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee. The term, "franchise fee" is meant to be construed broadly to include any instance in which the grantor or its affiliate derives income or profit from a person who enters into a franchise agreement with the grantor. "Hour worked within the City" is to be interpreted according to its ordinary meaning, including all hours worked within the geographic boundaries of the City, excluding time spent in the City solely for the purpose of traveling through the City from a point of origin outside the City to a destination outside the City, with no employment -related or commercial stops in the City except for refueling or the employee's personal meals or errands. ' "Large Employer" means all employers that employ more than 500 employees, regardless of where those employees are employed, and all franchisees associated with a franchisor or a network of franchises with franchisees that employ more than 500 employees in aggregate. "Other covered employer" means a covered employer that does not qualify as a large employer. "Service charge" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.160(2)(c). "Tips" means a verifiable sum to be presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for the customer by the employee receiving the tip. "Wage" is defined as set forth in RCW 49.46.010. Section 11. Other Legal Requirements. This ordinance shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater wages or compensation; and nothing in this ordinance shall be interpreted or applied so as to create any power or duty in conflict with federal or state law. Section 12. Rulemaking. Within 180 days after the effective date, the City shall adopt rules and procedures to implement and ensure compliance with this chapter, which shall require employers to maintain adequate records and to annually certify compliance with this chapter. The City shall seek feedback from worker organizations and covered employers before finalizing the rules and procedures. Section 13. Constitutional Subject. For constitutional purposes, this measure's subject "concerns labor standards for certain employers." See File Foods, LLC v. City of SeaTac, 183 Wash. 2d 770, 783, 357 P.3d 1040, 1047 (2015) (upholding this statement of subject for an initiative that set a minimum wage and addressed employees' access to hours). Section 14. Codification. All sections of this ordinance except section 9 shall be codified in a new chapter of the Renton Municipal Code. Section 15. Election date. In the event that the election on this measure takes place later than November 7, 2023, the Finance Department must establish and publish the initial minimum wage within 30 days of the effective date. Section 16. Severability. The provisions of this ordinance are declared to be separate and severable. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, subsection, or portion of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any employer, employee, or circumstance, is held to be invalid, it shall not affect the validity of the remainder of this ordinance, or the validity of its application to other persons or circumstances.