Skip to content
1 - /townhall/Kasich1/ -- Capitol Hill Town Hall Series
TRENDING:
Advertisement

Students walk past a chalk sign that reads "Raise wages, not tuition, make UW pay $11," written on steps, Wednesday, April 1, 2015, on the University of Washington campus in Seattle in support of raising the minimum wage for campus workers. Seattle's new $15 minimum wage law began going into effect Wednesday with a program to gradually raise wages through 2017 and beyond, but UW officials have questioned whether their status as a state entity would require them to raise wages for students and other campus workers on the same schedule. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)

Students walk past a chalk sign that reads "Raise wages, not tuition, make UW pay $11," written on steps, Wednesday, April 1, 2015, on the University of Washington campus in Seattle in support of raising the minimum wage for campus workers. Seattle's new $15 minimum wage law began going into effect Wednesday with a program to gradually raise wages through 2017 and beyond, but UW officials have questioned whether their status as a state entity would require them to raise wages for students and other campus workers on the same schedule. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)

Featured Photo Galleries