By Ralph R. Reiland on 7.26.05 @ 12:06AM
Turns out the hefty pay raise legislators recently gave themselves is not only sleazy but illegal.
PITTSBURGH -- "Harrisburg is one of the sleaziest state capitals
in the country," said Jake Tapper, then the Washington
correspondent for Salon, and that was before he saw the
sleaze that oozed from under the closed doors of the state
Legislature at 2 a.m. one recent night after the politicians voted
themselves an illegal pay hike.
The pay increase is illegal because, by allowing legislators to
pocket the new money in the form of "unvouchered expenses," it
violates Article 2, Section 8 of the state constitution, which
specifically forbids legislators to collect new pay raises until
they've been re-elected.
"It's illegal to give yourself a raise now," says Temple
University Law School professor David Kairys. "If you want to give
yourself the raise and call it lunch money, that's not going to
make it legal."
As explained to me by a couple of insiders in the process,
legislative leaders lined up the votes for the unlawful pay grab by
promising special so-called WAMS (walking around money) to
legislators who "cooperated." Once more than enough votes were
secured, other incumbents, less secure in their districts, were
given the green light to vote against the pay hike in order to
strengthen their chances of re-election.
To vote themselves instant pay increases in the past, lawmakers
did end runs around the state constitution with the full approval
of the courts, by the state Supreme Court in 1986 and Commonwealth
Court in 1997. What's likely to make this organized theft all legal
again is the inclusion of hefty salary increases for the judges
who'll be deciding on the pay hike's legitimacy.
"This should be challenged again, and it should go before the
state Supreme Court," says Bruce Ledewitz, a professor who teaches
constitutional law at Duquesne University. "It's terrible. There's
no other word for it. It's a disgraceful refusal by the court to
enforce the state constitution."
Says Gov. Ed Rendell, no professor of law: "It's legal, and
that's all I'm going to say about it."
Seeing a mismanaged state that has "more uncontested state
legislative elections than most any other comparably sized state,"
Tapper concluded that "the state's spirit of democracy has seen
better days."
Demonstrating that the current state of shady politics in
Pennsylvania is nothing new, the aforementioned conclusion by Mr.
Tapper that Harrisburg is "one of the sleaziest state capitals in
the country" is from Salon's "Politics 2000."
Further back, 300 protesters jammed the Capitol Rotunda in 1995
carrying placards to express outrage about a legislative pay grab.
"Thieves and Scoundrels," said one sign. Another showed Porky Pig
clutching a wad of cash, saying, "They'll take it all, folks."
Former gubernatorial candidate Peg Luksik warned the crowd not
to forget the pay increase during the next election. Voters, she
said, were angry in 1983 and 1987 when lawmakers in Harrisburg
voted themselves a raise, but, come election time, the public
forgot and the incumbents were easily re-elected.
"They know they're not accountable," explained Luksik. "They're
counting on you crying wolf," counting on voters to put their anger
on the back burner after a few weeks of venting.
This time around, Pennsylvania's lawmakers voted themselves
raises of 16 percent to 34 percent, on top of the 5.2 percent
cost-of-living increase they received in December, a
"cost-of-living" pay boost that was more than double the core rate
of inflation at the time.
The 16 percent produces a minimum annual pay increase to
lawmakers on the bottom rungs of the Legislature of $11,403, an
amount larger than the total pre-tax income that a person earns in
Pennsylvania working 40 hours per week at the minimum wage for a
year.
Overall, the pay hike raises the base legislative salary from
$69,647 a year (nearly double the average salary in Pennsylvania)
to $81,050, in addition to boosting the compensation of those in
leadership roles by up to 34 percent, to $145,463 per year -- not
counting the cost of free cars, $10,000 no-receipt expense
accounts, free health care, fully paid vision and dental coverage,
free prescriptions, fully paid life insurance and long-term care
insurance, the 50 percent increase in pension benefits the
legislators awarded themselves four years ago, and the extra $128
they pocket on every session day just for showing up.
Will Rogers had it right. "A politician," he said, "is just like
a pickpocket."
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