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Kansas lawmakers are allowing a 93% pay raise for themselves to take effect next year

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P. Coonan

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Feb 16, 2024, 9:12:41 PMFeb 16
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TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas is set to nearly double state legislators' pay
at the start of next year, making their compensation better than it is for
their counterparts in a majority of states, including more populous ones
like Georgia and Texas.

The increase is nearly $28,000 a year for rank-and-file legislators,
boosting their total compensation from $30,000 to nearly $58,000, an
increase of 93%. Legislative leaders get additional payments because of
their duties, and the House speaker and Senate president are set to make
more than $85,000 a year, up from $44,000.

The pay increase appeared to have bipartisan support, though lawmakers
never voted directly on it. Instead, they set up a bipartisan pay
commission last year, with its proposal taking effect unless both
legislative chambers passed a resolution rejecting it by Wednesday. An
effort to force a debate in the Senate failed last week and there was no
such move in the House.

Some Kansas legislators have complained for years that their annual
compensation of $30,000 isn't enough to live on year-round, while their
duties as lawmakers cut into outside work or even prevent them from
holding down other jobs. Supporters of the pay increase say it is likely
to make the Legislature more diverse when it's in danger of becoming
mostly retirees and wealthy people.

“You might get a few more females," said state Sen. Cindy Holscher, a
Kansas City-area Democrat. "You might get a few more minorities. You might
get a few more younger people.”

Alaska lawmakers’ salaries rose by 67% last month at the start of their
annual session, from $50,400 to $84,000, also because legislators let a
proposal from a pay commission stand. New Jersey legislators will see
their pay increase in 2026, also by 67%, from $49,000 to $82,000. New York
lawmakers received a 29% raise at the start of 2023, making their pay the
highest in the nation at $142,000 a year.

Most states pay a salary and give their lawmakers extra money each day to
cover expenses in session, according to National Conference of State
Legislatures data. New Hampshire's salary is $100 a year — the same as it
was in 1889 — while New Mexico pays $202 to cover lawmakers' expenses in
session but no salary.

When Kansas became a state in 1861, its constitution said lawmakers were
to receive $3 a day in session, up to $150. They didn’t get a raise for
nearly 90 years, with voters rejecting five proposals before approving pay
of $12 a day in 1948. In 1962, voters said lawmakers’ pay could be set by
state law.

The new figure, nearly $58,000, includes both a salary and daily, in-
session payments to cover expenses such as meals and housing.

“I think it’s fair,” said House Speaker Dan Hawkins, a Wichita Republican.
“I think that the commission did, really, a pretty good job.”

Commission members argued that their sizeable pay increase represented
catching lawmakers' compensation up to several decades' worth of
inflation. However, the proposal did draw at least a few objections.

Sen. Rob Olson, a conservative Kansas City-area Republican, tried and
failed last week to pull an anti-pay raise resolution out of the Senate
budget committee so senators could debate it on the floor. The effort fell
short because a dozen of the 40 senators passed.

Senate President Ty Masterson, a Wichita-area Republican, saw opposition
to the pay raise as political grandstanding.

“It's just kind of political theater,” he said after last week's vote.

The Senate budget committee did review the pay proposal Tuesday during a
short hearing. Nicholas Reinecker, a central Kansas restaurant owner who
makes seven to 10 trips to Topeka a year to advocate for legalizing
cannabis, had to interrupt the committee's adjournment — after no action —
to get his opposition on record.

He said he wants Kansas to keep its “citizen” Legislature, adding that
when lawmakers take their oaths of office, they promise to “sacrifice for
God, family and country.”

“I'm sorry, it's not supposed to be a job,” he told the committee,
predicting that the big pay raise could lead to “entanglements” with
professional lobbyists.

Olson said he doubts lawmakers' constituents support such a big pay raise
and said they should have the courage to debate it and vote on it.

And Rep. Ken Corbet, a Topeka Republican who operates a hunting lodge,
said that in most businesses, the boss sets the pay, not the employees.
And his boss — the taxpayers — haven't told him a pay raise is OK with
them, he said.

He had considered proposing his own anti-raise resolution, but,
“Apparently, there was not an appetite for that.”

https://news.yahoo.com/kansas-lawmakers-allowing-93-pay-060317468.html

Governor Swill

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Feb 18, 2024, 1:13:14 PMFeb 18
to
On Sat, 17 Feb 2024 02:12:38 -0000 (UTC), "P. Coonan" <nos...@ix.netcom.com> wrote:

>TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas is set to nearly double state legislators' pay
>at the start of next year, making their compensation better than it is for
>their counterparts in a majority of states, including more populous ones
>like Georgia and Texas.
>
>The increase is nearly $28,000 a year for rank-and-file legislators,
>boosting their total compensation from $30,000 to nearly $58,000, an
>increase of 93%. Legislative leaders get additional payments because of
>their duties, and the House speaker and Senate president are set to make
>more than $85,000 a year, up from $44,000.

Thirty thou certainly is not enough to live on but doubling it seems an awful big jump for
one raise. Can't really blame them though.

Swill
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