Mayor Catherine Pugh said she will veto a bill that would raise Baltimore City's minimum wage. In a press conference Friday, she said her office will instead support statewide measures in Annapolis.

"I don't think there's anybody that wants to see the minimum wage increased more than I do," Pugh said. "But when I think about the economic impact...I think it's important that we follow the lead of the state."

If Baltimore City raises its minimum wage and encircling jurisdictions don't, the city will be the "hole in the donut," Pugh said, economically speaking.

Pugh said she spoke to counterparts across the state, as well as former mayor Kurt Schmoke and representatives of a number of nonprofits.

"You know, Catherine, if you push for the bill and sign for the bill, probably we would benefit, but we're rooting for you, we're rooting for the city of Baltimore," she said in recalling the gist of these conversations.

While the bill passed the City Council by a veto-proof margin, she said she's told some council members who voted for the bill are now taking a "real close look," so the votes to override her veto may not be there. One of them is Councilman Edward Reisinger, who confirmed to WBAL a Baltimore Jewish Times report he might vote against overriding Pugh's veto.

State law already mandates hikes in the minimum wage over the next couple years up to $10.10 an hour. The ordinance would have escalated it over the following few years to $15 an hour. However, as an employer itself, the city has hundreds of employees who it would need to pay more when the city raises take effect. While she said prior to taking office that she would support raising the city's minimum wage, she said Friday that that was before city officials reached an agreement on a consent decree that will carry as-yet-unknown costs.