Pennsylvania's minimum wage remains $7.25 per hour, matching the federal floor under the PA Minimum Wage Act (43 P.S. Β§333.101 et seq.). State law preempts local minimum wage ordinances β Philadelphia attempted a $10.88 city wage in 2014 that was struck down by Commonwealth Court. The tipped minimum is $2.83. Pennsylvania has not raised the state wage since 2009.
The Pennsylvania Minimum Wage Act (43 P.S. Β§333.101 et seq.), enacted in 1968, sets the state minimum wage at $7.25 per hour β the same as the federal Fair Labor Standards Act floor since the last increase in 2009. The tipped minimum is $2.83 per hour, with employers required to make up the difference if tips don't bring the worker to $7.25. The Act has been interpreted by the Commonwealth Court to preempt municipal minimum wage ordinances, most notably in Building Owners and Managers Ass'n of Pittsburgh v. City of Pittsburgh (2018), which struck down a paid sick leave ordinance, and in earlier rulings on Philadelphia's 2014 attempt to set a $10.88 city minimum for workers at companies receiving city contracts (the contracting provision survived but a general minimum wage hike was not adopted citywide). The PA Department of Labor & Industry enforces wage and hour law under 43 P.S. Β§333.108. Multiple legislative proposals to raise the state minimum to $15/hr have stalled in the General Assembly since 2019. Cities cannot adopt local minimum wages applicable to private employers; they can only set wage floors for their own employees and direct contractors.
Failure to pay the state minimum wage is recoverable under 43 P.S. Β§333.113 β employees may recover unpaid wages plus liquidated damages and attorney's fees. The PA Department of Labor & Industry may issue civil penalties up to $300 per violation and refer willful violations for criminal prosecution. Cities passing preempted minimum wage ordinances face declaratory judgment actions in Commonwealth Court.
Bristol, PA
Bristol Borough regulates construction noise through general excessive noise ordinance (Ch. 10). No separate construction hour limits found; general prohibit...
Bristol, PA
Bristol Borough Ch. 10 (Excessive Noise) prohibits unnecessary or excessive noise detrimental to health, safety, or public peace. Truck idling restricted 10 ...
Bristol, PA
Bristol Borough Ch. 2, Part 3 (Noisy Animals, Ord. 1005, 7/14/1986) regulates excessive animal noise. Borough Council declared excessive sound detrimental to...
Bristol, PA
Bristol Borough Ch. 27 requires unlicensed vehicles/trailers in commercial/industrial zones to be stored in enclosed buildings. Off-street loading requiremen...
Bristol, PA
Bristol Borough Ch. 27 limits RVs to one per residential lot in R-1, R-1A, and R-2 districts, max 9% of lot area. RVs may not be used for living or sleeping....
Bristol, PA
Bristol Borough Ch. 27 requires off-street parking per Table 27-7-A by use type. All parking areas must be separated from roads by raised curbs or barriers. ...
See how Bristol's minimum wage preemption rules stack up against other locations.
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