Legislators' Pay Falls Behind
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By Eric Kelderman
Legislators in Alabama, New Hampshire and Texas are paid the
same today as when Gerald Ford was president in 1975. In Indiana,
lawmakers' base pay has been stuck at $11,600 for 22 years.
Nebraska has awarded only four legislative pay raises since 1934
– the most recent in 1988. In 28 states, state lawmakers'
salaries have declined when adjusted for inflation, according
to a first-of-its-kind study of legislative pay from 1975 to
2005 by the nonprofit Council of State Governments (CSG).
In the 22 other states, elected representatives' paychecks
surpassed inflation by as little as 0.8 percent in Missouri over
the 30-year period, to as much as 745 percent in Idaho, where
lawmakers earned $15,646 in 2005. Even in states where
legislative pay improved, it often failed to keep up with
wages in other jobs, according to CSG, which researches trends
in state government.
Nationwide, while the median income of their constituents rose 50
percent between 1975 and 2005, the nation's 7,382
elected state representatives saw their average salaries fall more
than 6 percent when adjusted for inflation. In Massachusetts,
for example, legislators make 18 percent more than they did in
1975, adjusted for inflation, but the Bay State's per-capita income
increased more than 85 percent. "If legislators are not paid
adequately, then candidates are drawn from a smaller pool. ... You
can't expect to attract good candidates with pay that is lower when
compared to other jobs and professions," concluded Keon Chi,
author of the report and editor in chief of CSG's Book of the
States. By comparison, federal salaries for rank-and-file
members of Congress has increased from $44,600 in 1975 to
$162,100 in 2005.
The study details how state legislative pay varies enormously,
depending on the length of the lawmaking session and the region of
the country. States are ranked by the basic amount they pay
legislators, but the study separately looks at other forms of
compensation, such as per-diem, expense allowances and retirement
benefits, but not other perks like car allowances.
Not surprisingly, full-time lawmakers in nine states earn the
most. The highest paid are in California, where the session
runs all year and legislators earn $110,880 annually. The
lowest salary in that group is in Wisconsin, where elected
representatives earn $45,569 a year. The median income for the nine
full-time legislatures is $57,619. At the other end of the scale,
the 424 part-time legislators in New Hampshire -- the largest
state legislature -- get $100 a year for their annual 45-day
legislative session. New Hampshire is one of 18 states where state
lawmaking is mostly a second job for legislators. The median
income for those elected officials is $9,230.
In between are legislatures in 22 states, where members earn
part-time pay but work about two-thirds of the year for their
constituents. Legislators in those states earned a median income of
$24,000 in 2005.
Geographically, the East Coast pays its elected state
representatives the most. Legislators in 11 eastern states earn a
median salary of $33,892. Southern lawmakers in 10 states are paid
the least on average, with a median income of $15,750. Raising
politicians' pay is politically difficult. In the 2006 primary,
angry voters ousted 17 incumbents from the Pennsylvania
Legislature after lawmakers voted to increase their
nearly $70,000 salary up to 54 percent. More than 30 other
legislators chose to retire last year rather than face voters'
wrath. The outrage led legislators to rescind the pay raise. Even
modest raises for lesser-paid lawmakers can be problematic. Indiana
legislators are hoping to increase their base pay of $11,600 for
the first time since 1985. But an increase in legislators' health
benefits approved last year contributed to the defeat of a longtime
state Senate leader in the 2006 primary. Lawmakers are promising to
repeal the health perk as part of their current pay-raise proposal.
In 2006, Arizona voters turned down a 50 percent pay increase, to
$36,000, for state legislators recommended by that state's
Commission on Salaries for Elective State Officers. The
commission's decisions are automatically put on the ballot. Another
pay raise is being considered for the 2008 ballot. Nebraska voters
also must approve any pay raises for the 49 state senators of its
unicameral Legislature. They rejected an opportunity to raise
legislators' pay from $12,000 to $21,000 in May 2006. The state
Senate currently is considering a proposal to increase
salaries to $22,100, with an automatic adjustment for inflation
every two years.
For a chart on legislative pay levels, click here.
Source: stateline.org.
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© 2012 Penton Media Inc.
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