Will lawmakers end the practice of allowing Georgians with disabilities to be paid subminimum wage?

Crystal St. Pierre-Stackpole said her brother’s first job sorting recyclable items from garbage earned him less than minimum wage. He now works at Zaxbys. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

Tiziana Fabi / AFP via Getty Images

A bipartisan measure that would phase out a program that allows employers to pay people with disabilities below the minimum wage – including less than $1 an hour – is gaining traction in the Senate.

A bill, sponsored by Republican Statesboro state Sen. Billy Hickman, was recently unanimously voted out of committee over the objections of one of the few centers left in Georgia that are still participating in the program. 

Called the “Dignity and Pay Act,” the proposal would give providers two years to end their participation in a federal program that was originally created in the 1930s to encourage employers to hire veterans returning home from war with disabilities.