Texas Labor Code Section 62.0515 expressly preempts municipal and county minimum wage ordinances. The state minimum wage equals the federal floor of $7.25 per hour, and political subdivisions cannot require private employers to pay more, except for their own contracts.
Section 62.0515 of the Texas Minimum Wage Act provides that the minimum wage in this state supersedes a wage established in an ordinance, order, or charter provision governing wages in private employment. Cities such as Austin, Houston, and San Antonio cannot mandate higher minimum wages on private employers within their jurisdictions. Limited exceptions allow local governments to set wage floors for their own employees and direct contractors. HB 2127 (2023) reinforces this preemption by occupying the field of labor regulation. The state minimum wage tracks the federal Fair Labor Standards Act rate of $7.25/hour under Labor Code 62.051.
Local private-sector minimum wage ordinances are unenforceable and subject to declaratory judgment; HB 2127 also provides for civil penalties and trade association standing.
Rosenberg, TX
Rosenberg adopts the 2018 International Swimming Pool and Spa Code by reference and requires a residential building permit for any swimming pool, with city r...
Rosenberg, TX
Rosenberg requires multi-family developments to install eight-foot decorative masonry walls and limits commercial perimeter property line fences to chain lin...
Rosenberg, TX
Rosenberg Sec. 1-481 prohibits fences from being built on or overhanging a property line and lets the city remove dilapidated fences at the owner's expense a...
Rosenberg, TX
Rosenberg requires a residential building permit for any fence over seven feet tall, plus contractor registration; doing fence work without the proper permit...
Rosenberg, TX
Rosenberg does not impose a flat residential fence height cap because it has no traditional zoning, but any fence taller than seven feet requires a residenti...
Rosenberg, TX
Rosenberg requires every property to keep weeds, grass, and brush under twelve inches tall, with limited exemptions for agricultural acreage.
See how Rosenberg's minimum wage preemption rules stack up against other locations.
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