Current:Home > ContactLawmakers criticize a big pay raise for themselves before passing a big spending bill -MoneyStream
Lawmakers criticize a big pay raise for themselves before passing a big spending bill
EchoSense Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-06 22:47:32
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas legislators approved on Friday another year’s worth of funding for most state agencies and services after a few lawmakers staged a last-minute public protest over a 93% pay increase for themselves coming next year.
The Republican-controlled Senate approved, 26-12, a bill with about $19 billion in spending for the state’s 2025 budget year, which begins July 1. It covers most of the spending outside of aid to the state’s public schools, which is in a separate measure that has stalled.
The Senate’s action came hours after the GOP-controlled House approved the bill, 78-44, so the measure goes next to Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly. She’s likely to sign the bill, but the state constitution allows her to veto individual spending items, which she has done regularly in the past.
The bill would provide a 5% pay increase for all state government workers, plus larger increases for public safety workers and workers whose pay has lagged behind their counterparts in the private sector. But those increases are far short of the pay raise for lawmakers taking effect at the start of 2025 under a law enacted last year that didn’t require them to vote on the increase.
Critics of the pay raise managed to get the Senate to include in its version of the next state budget a provision delaying the pay raise at least another year. House and Senate negotiators didn’t include it in the final version of Friday’s spending bill, prompting opponents to complain about the gap between the 93% raise for lawmakers and the 5% raise for most state workers.
“People don’t trust politicians,” said Sen. Rob Olson, a Kansas City-area Republican. “This is why.”
Kansas is flush with tax revenues and under the spending approved Friday is on track to have more than $3.7 billion in excess funds at the end of June 2025.
Kelly and top Republicans brokered a deal earlier this week income, sales and property tax cuts, but the House scuttled it Thursday. Lawmakers planned to adjourn Friday for a three-week spring break, postponing another push on tax cuts until after they return April 29 for the last few days in session this year.
Legislators also haven’t approved a bill with $6 billion in spending for the K-12 public school system. The state’s 286 districts will see an increase in aid between $240 million and $320 million, or between 4.9% and 6.5%. However, disagreements over special education policies led the Senate to reject one bill Thursday 12-26, forcing lawmakers to draft a new version.
The bill funding other parts of the budget included provisions from GOP senators aimed at forcing Kelly to provide help to Texas in its border security fight with the Biden administration and restrict diversity programs on college campuses.
House and Senate negotiators decided not to delay the legislative pay raise.
A bipartisan commission of mostly former legislators concluded last year that lawmakers are underpaid and that low pay keeps younger and less wealthy people and people of color out of the Legislature. The law creating the commission allowed the raise to take effect unless both chambers rejected it by early February, which they didn’t.
The increase will be nearly $28,000 a year for rank-and-file legislators, boosting their total compensation from $30,000 to nearly $58,000, including daily expense reimbursements in session. Legislative leaders get additional payments because of their duties, and the House speaker and Senate president will make more than $85,000 a year, up from $44,000.
During the House’s debate, Republican Rep. Chuck Smith, of southeastern Kansas, backed the pay raise by praising the work of the chairs of the House budget committee and a committee on K-12 spending.
“We ought to be thanking these people for what they do,” Smith said. “It’s unbelievable, the quality of people we have in here.”
The tone was far different in the Senate. Facing a barrage of questions from Olson and Sen. Dennis Pyle, a northeastern Kansas Republican, Billinger acknowledged that he doesn’t think the big pay raise is appropriate.
“Something’s very, very wrong,” Pyle said. “It’s a sad day for Kansas.”
Pay for lawmakers varies widely by state, according to National Conference of State Legislatures data. New Hampshire’s salary is $100 a year — the same as in 1889 — while New Mexico pays $202 to cover lawmakers’ expenses in session but no salary.
Alaska lawmakers’ salaries rose by 67% from $50,400 to $84,000 at the start of their annual session this year, and 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.
veryGood! (28)
Related
- Juan Soto praise of Mets' future a tough sight for Yankees, but World Series goal remains
- You'll Flip for Shawn Johnson and Andrew East's 2024 Olympics Photo Diary
- American Hockey League mandates neck guards to prevent cuts from skate blades
- Under sea and over land, the Paris Paralympics flame is beginning an exceptional journey
- Juan Soto praise of Mets' future a tough sight for Yankees, but World Series goal remains
- Police search for the attacker who killed 3 in a knifing in the German city of Solingen
- Dennis Quaid doesn't think a 'Parent Trap' revival is possible without Natasha Richardson
- Popular family YouTuber Ms. Rachel is coming out with a toy line very soon
- Trump's 'stop
- Ella Emhoff's DNC dress was designed in collaboration with a TikToker: 'We Did It Joe!'
Ranking
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Takeaways from Fed Chair Powell’s speech at Jackson Hole
- Michigan man sentenced to life in 2-year-old’s kidnapping death
- The EPA can’t use Civil Rights Act to fight environmental injustice in Louisiana, judge rules
- Have Dry, Sensitive Skin? You Need To Add These Gentle Skincare Products to Your Routine
- Prosecutor says ex-sheriff’s deputy charged with manslaughter in shooting of an airman at his home
- Virginia man arrested on suspicion of 'concealment of dead body' weeks after wife vanishes
- Isabella Strahan Poses in Bikini While Celebrating Simple Pleasures After Cancer Battle
Recommendation
Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
Senators demand the USDA fix its backlog of food distribution to Native American tribes
Meet Virgo, the Zodiac's helpful perfectionist: The sign's personality traits, months
NASA decision against using a Boeing capsule to bring astronauts back adds to company’s problems
The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
Former Alabama prosecutor found guilty of abusing position for sex
Shohei Ohtani joins exclusive 40-40 club with epic walk-off grand slam
Dump truck leaves hole in covered bridge when it crashes into river in Maine