Washington Law Review
Abstract
This Comment challenges as unconstitutional Washington’s exemption of incarcerated individuals from the state Minimum Wage Act. Incarcerated people in Washington, unprotected by minimum wage guarantees, earn low wages in state-run inmate work programs. This statutory carveout is contrary to the rehabilitative purpose of Washington’s prisons because it impedes incarcerated people’s ability to afford necessities, participate in rehabilitative programs, and reintegrate into society. This exemption is unconstitutional under the state’s cruel punishment clause, because it is disproportionately cruel punishment and an excessive fine that incarcerated workers cannot afford. The exemption is also unconstitutional under the state’s privileges and immunities clause, because it unconstitutionally grants workers outside prison the privilege of earning a minimum wage that is not equally available to workers inside prison.
First Page
755
Recommended Citation
Cailin Dahlin,
Comment,
A State Constitutional Challenge to Washington’s Denial of Minimum Wage to Incarcerated Workers,
100 Wash. L. Rev.
755
(2025).
Available at:
https://digitalcommons.law.uw.edu/wlr/vol100/iss3/7
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