Depends on your state and your family size. Might also depend on your health and how much meds you have to pay for every month.
Personally, $11 an hour wouldn't be a liveable wage for my family of 10.
Food, bills, house, clothes, and extra to fix things or allow the kids to take extracurricular classes. Though the latter isn't necessarily necessary. It would also be nice to have enough for charity.
Considering I can get a gallon jug of water for $3 that will last me a few days easy, up to a week....
And that I can get enough food at McDonald's (yeah I know not healthy but it's still food) for a day for $10 and eat very well? (2 burgers, 2 fries, and 20 pieces of chicken nuggets).
And that's not being frugal with groceries. If you work 8 hours at $10 an hour, even with taxes factored in at 20% an hour and a half should easily pay for your food.
Then again if you are working a $10 an hour job maybe it's better to work at a food joint. At least then you get discounts or free meals. If you don't want to work at a food joint, aim for something that pays $3 or more an hour.
Atop that, don't get things you can't afford. At $10 an hour a car is going to be rough. You're going to be taking a bus a lot. And probably renting a room or having a roommate.
It's called minimum wage for a reason. There's no such thing as a livable wage, the amount of money you need for the lifestyle you desire or have is variant for everyone. It's nothing more than pretty language to hide the term "minimum."
Don't shoot for or even care about minimum wage in your life.
If you want livable, improve yourself and your skills, learn how to bring value to the business (instead of making employment with them about you). You are being paid to provide a service. So bring value and find those who appreciate it. If you live somewhere where this is not possible then maybe it's time to migrate somewhere with better opportunities (and please leave the "progressive" mindset back in the failing state you are leaving, don't try to change places that you move to that are working fine. They work for a reason.)
We aren't entitled to anything in this life. Our rights simply mean the government isn't allowed to try to take them from us. What you make of life is up to you. Sometimes yes, you will not reach those lofty heights.
It's easy to demand government help and be charitable when you're using other people's money. But it's not charity when you force it on people with increased taxes and prices go up to make up for it or businesses shut down because it makes no sense to keep operating in that city. (then states try to go after you if you spend 60 days in their state and demand you pay them income tax anyway for the next 10 years while really giving you nothing in return when you leave). California is actually attempting to do this.
All this started with the "livable wage" nonsense.
Livable is something you work to attain. Minimum is what you are owed. That raise in minimum wage won't go far when the local prices rise to compensate for all the other employees they have to pay citywide too (after all it's not just you getting that raise).
Meaning that $11 an hour will probably buy as much as what you're being paid now.