SQ 832 TOOLKIT

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“Oklahoma restaurant owners are sounding the alarm on SQ 832. The ballot measure would tie Oklahoma’s minimum wage to the cost of living in states like California and New York—driving wages far above local market rates. Vote NO on State Question 832 June 16.”

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“State Question 832 threatens small businesses with unintended consequences. Fewer job opportunities, higher costs, and added pressure on small employers. Vote NO on SQ 83 June 16. Learn more.”

“Tired of rising costs? SQ 832 will only make it worse, harming small businesses and ensuring prices go up. Vote NO on State Question 832 on June 16! Learn more.”

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What is State Question 832?

State Question 832 (SQ 832) seeks to amend the Oklahoma Minimum Wage Act in Oklahoma Statutes by untying the state from the federal minimum wage. The question will appear before voters on the June 2026 primary ballot, and if approved, it would increase Oklahoma’s state mandated minimum wage beginning in 2027 to $12 per hour and continue with annual wage increases to $15 per hour until 2029. Beginning in 2030, the wage will increase with the cost of living, as measured by the U.S. Department of Labor’s Consumer Price Index.

On November 20, 2023, The State Chamber and Oklahoma Farm Bureau filed a challenge in the Oklahoma Supreme Court against proposed State Question 832.  “State Chamber member companies have no interest in artificially holding down wages, and in today’s labor market, they could not stay in business if they tried to do so,” said Chad Warmington, president and CEO of The State Chamber. “Let’s be clear, most of our members already pay well above the current minimum wage hourly rate to their non-salaried employees. What is a major concern to us is the automatic, open-ended increase being linked to a federal government produced index that is based upon cost-of-living rates in cities like New York or San Francisco. Those areas are not reflective of the actual cost of living in Oklahoma.

To illustrate the spiral SQ 832’s Inflation Escalator could impose on Oklahoma families and businesses, the following projections are helpful. Within a decade and a half of taking effect, the Inflation Escalator in SQ 832 would take the government-mandated wage from today’s $7.25 per hour to:

  • $22.16 per hour, if CPI-W grows at the 10-year average;
  • $27.56 per hour, if CPI-W grows at the 5-year average; and
  • $35.61 per hour, if CPI-W grows at the 3-year average.

While on the surface, this may seem beneficial for low-wage workers, the collaborative effort between The State Chamber of Oklahoma and Oklahoma Farm Bureau seeks to address the complexities and adverse effects on various sectors of the state’s economy. Study after study has demonstrated that when a state or city hikes its minimum wage, the result is fewer employment opportunities, higher costs for consumers, increased business failures, or some combination of those three signs of economic destruction. Worse, those economic effects are typically borne by the very people advocates claim they are trying to help—low-income workers.

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News
SQ 832
April 29, 2026

Economist warns SQ 832 could hurt entry-level workers

SQ 832
January 13, 2026

Oklahoma restaurant owner warns SQ 832 will kill jobs, businesses

SQ 832
June 30, 2025

$30 Minimum Wage Has L.A. Hotel Owners in Revolt

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SQ 832
March 31, 2025

Lion data exclusive: Minimum wage hikes hurt fast-food workers nationwide, not just in California

SQ 832
March 31, 2025

Missourians vote to increase minimum wage, require paid sick leave

SQ 832
March 31, 2025

Voters deliver mixed verdicts on increasing minimum wage, but support paid sick leave

SQ 832
March 31, 2025

Economic Data of how many states will have a $15 min wage by 2027 and some data on the costs

SQ 832The News
September 17, 2024

Legislators oppose minimum wage increase

SQ 832The News
September 17, 2024

‘He has a precedent’: Supporters of raising minimum wage in OK question vote timeline

SQ 832The News
September 17, 2024

State Question 832, A Ballot Measure To Raise Oklahoma’s Minimum Wage, Pushed To 2026

SQ 832The News
September 17, 2024

State Question 832 not on Nov. 5 ballot