 I have to work two jobs and those three jobs I work is not enough. I don't make enough money. McKinley Celestin is a single father of three who works security positions at McDonald's, the Prudential Center and a club in Cambridge. The Mosey Earns in a Given Hour is $12.75 and every week he works 80 plus hours. I don't have enough time to see my youngest child which is four years old. The Haitian immigrant is one of many low-wage workers who are joining the Fight for 15 movement which aims to raise the minimum wage to $15 for employees of big box retailers and fast food chains. I want to be able to work one job not three not two one job. According to the Economic Policy Institute in 1990 low-wage workers earned about $12.26 per hour in Massachusetts. In 2015 that number has dropped to just under $12 that's a 2.4 percent decrease. Companies have been extremely aggressive in trying to prevent any unionization so that's undermined people's ability to get fair wages. Lou Finn for the director of Massachusetts Community's Action Network believes corporate greed is a key cause of wage inequality. They basically have had the power to enable most of those increase in profits to go to themselves, the higher paid executives and workers and to stockholders and not pay their low-wage workers a fair wage. Finn for believes the minimum wage hike should start with fast food workers and big box retailers. There was a clear case to raise it at least for the categories of large retail and fast food because they work for major national corporations and making large amounts of money and that they could pay their workers more so that's why we're trying with this legislation right now. Just last week California and New York took it a step further and enacted legislation that will gradually push their state's minimum wage to $15 for all workers. Mayor Marty Walsh said he supports the push for 15 and so does McKinley. I want that 15 to be a reality. Workers like McKinley will gather at the state house this Thursday to rally for higher wages. It's one of many events taking place across the country on what is known as National Action Day. The Massachusetts State Senate says it's currently considering increasing the minimum wage to $15 for all workers. Reporting in downtown Boston, I'm Brandon Lewis for the BU News Service.