Another COLA, please!
In case you haven't heard, legislators and the
Governor will be receiving a pay raise as of Saturday,
December 1, 2007. The cost of living adjustment
(COLA) will add 3.5 percent to the gross pay of these
public servants. More than 1000 Pennsylvania judges
will receive similar increases in January.
In actual dollars, pay for members of the
General Assembly will increase by $2550 to $76,163.
That's just the base salary. Some legislators will
make much more as committee and chamber
leaders. Senate Pro Tempore Joseph Scarnati and
Speaker of the House Dennis O'Brien will have their
salaries boosted to $118,896 each.
Governor Ed Rendell will receive almost $6,000 more
in salary. The salaries of the state's attorney general,
treasurer and auditor general will increase to
$141,565 each. Justices of the Supreme Court will
see their salaries increase to $181,000 annually.
The average Pennsylvanian earns less than $38,000
per year.
Few private sector employees will receive a 3.5
percent pay increase. Rank-and-file state employees
are not receiving these COLAs.
The COLAs were made possible by a law passed in
1995. Every year, the salaries of elected officials in
state government are adjusted based on the
highest-in-Pennsylvania Philadelphia cost of living
index.
Whether they need it or not, whether they deserve it or
not, the annual pay raise kicks in. While average
Pennsylvanians worry about how to pay for the
commute to work and heating their homes, elected
officials have a hedge against inflation.
We begrudge no one the ability to make a living, but it
seems very unrepresentative for legislators to be
insulated from the economic effects of their policies. It
appears unstatesmanlike for the Governor to take a
pay raise when most Pennsylvanians are pinching
pennies. And another pay raise for judges feels a bit
too much like injustice.
2007 kicked off with the initial Bonusgate revelations.
In the Spring primary, Act 1 - the latest attempt at tax
swapping to feign property tax reform - was
overwhelmingly kicked to the curb by voters who knew
better. The budget was over two weeks late and state
workers were used as pawns in the negotiations. A
dubious transportation bill was passed.
Meanwhile, $360 million in WAMs (walking around
money) for legislators was found somewhere. Tax
dollars have been used to conduct political polls.
Documents have been shredded. A former
Representative, a Superior Court
judge and a sitting Senator have been indicted. All four
caucuses of the
General Assembly are under the cloud of an
investigation by the attorney general.
There were some internal changes made in the
General Assembly, but much ado was made over
items that were mostly just common sense. The only
real reform they've tackled - open records, which
should be a slam dunk - has turned into the
legislative equivalent of a tooth-pulling contest at a
henhouse.
Did you receive a 3.5 increase in governmental value
in 2007?
Has government been 3.5 percent more productive?
Are Pennsylvanians 3.5 percent better off this year?
Did elected officials earn a 3.5 percent raise?
Fifty-five new legislators were sworn into office in
January in the aftermath of 2005's pay raise scandal.
Many of them hoisted the banner of reform over their
campaign to get elected. For them, the 2007 COLA
represents a
moment of truth. The honeymoon will soon be over.
They'll either quietly accept the extra salary and
become part of what's wrong, or they'll refuse it to
show their commitment to change and moving
Pennsylvania in a better direction.
As for the rest of the legislative, executive and judicial
branches, this is their opportunity to show they've
changed their ways and are now on the side of the
people they serve.
Another COLA? Puh-lease.
Errata: According to John Micek of the Allentown Morning Call, the executive, administration and row office COLAs go into effect in January, not December. We regret the error.
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