There is mixed reaction in Windsor-Essex to sweeping labour reform legislation passed in the Ontario legislature, which includes increasing the minimum wage to $15 an hour.

Currently at $11.60 an hour, the minimum wage will rise under the legislation to $14 an hour on Jan. 1, with the increase to $15 coming in 2019.

The plan has proved largely popular in government polling and with labour advocates, though it is controversial with businesses, who say the increase is too fast and will lead to job losses.

Josh Fraser, the owner of Rino’s Kitchen, says the legislation will impact other areas of his business.

“I also cook in the kitchen 40 hours a week here, so if I have to cook 50 hours a week to offset some of the increase, that's just how it’s going have to be” says Fraser.

The government and some economists argue that the hike will have some positive impact on the economy, as minimum wage earners get more spending power.

The Liberal government recently announced the provincial corporate tax rate for small businesses will be cut from 4.5 per cent to 3.5 per cent to help support businesses through the minimum wage transition, though Premier Kathleen Wynne said it was never intended to fully offset the impact.

The legislation also mandates equal pay for part-time workers, increases vacation entitlements and expands personal emergency leave.

Ron Dunn, the Executive Director at the Downtown Mission, tells CTV Windsor the changes to minimum wage will also impact their services.

“We're going to have to make decisions on staffing levels maybe even on programming, which programs can we still afford to run or not based on the reality of the dollar” says Dunn.

The labour reforms will form a key pillar of the Liberals' re-election platform, with the premier tying it at nearly every opportunity to a theme of fairness, along with free tuition for low- and middle-income students, more child care spaces and pharmacare for youth.

The minimum wage increase is the centrepiece of the legislation and also the plank that has garnered the most attention. While the $15 rate is one labour advocates have been urging for years, and dozens of economists signed a letter in support of it, business groups have been pushing hard against it.

They say it will be difficult to absorb the increased costs over such a short time frame.

The province's economic watchdog, the Financial Accountability Office, has estimated more than 50,000 people could lose their jobs due to the minimum wage increase.

A TD Bank report has estimated the minimum wage hike could cost the province's economy as many as 90,000 jobs by 2020. And an analysis from the Keep Ontario Working Coalition concluded over 185,000 jobs could be impacted.

With files from The Canadian Press.