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- <text id=89TT0249>
- <title>
- Jan. 23, 1989: Are They Worth It?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Jan. 23, 1989 Barbara Bush:The Silver Fox
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 12
- Are They Worth It?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Congress may give itself a whopping raise by ducking a vote --
- and blaming it on a commission
- </p>
- <p> The most talked about subject in Washington last week was
- not the Bush transition, the budget deficit or the woes of
- Mayor Marion Barry, but one that is close to the heart of every
- bureaucrat -- and every American: pay raises. A salary-review
- board has proposed hefty pay hikes for 3,000 top Government
- officials, including Cabinet officers, federal judges and the
- 535 members of the House and Senate. The whole pay package --
- including a 51% raise, to an annual $135,000, for members of
- Congress -- will cost $300 million in its first year. Even as
- the Bush Administration begins its uphill struggle to slash the
- deficit, the new pay raises will go into effect without serious
- congressional scrutiny or a meaningful vote.
- </p>
- <p> Many of those in the capital who are talking about the pay
- hike favor it, as do students of government who contend that
- too manLy of the most talented men and women pick private
- industry over public service because of the siren song of much
- higher pay. But for many Americans "out there" who already feel
- that life inside the Washington Beltway is a world vastly
- different from their own, the prospect of such big raises right
- at budget-cutting time is cause for concern, derision, even
- anger. At their current salary of $89,500 a year, Congressmen
- already make more than most American wage earners.
- </p>
- <p> The pay raise, nonetheless, is nearly certain to be adopted
- without a real debate. Unwilling to risk the wrath of their
- constituents by arguing publicly for salary hikes, lawmakers in
- 1967 devised a means of getting more money while ducking the
- blame. They established a Commission on Executive, Legislative
- and Judicial Salaries to review federal pay scales every four
- years.
- </p>
- <p> In December the commission suggested that top Government
- salaries be made more competitive. Accordingly, the President's
- pay would leap from $200,000 to $350,000 in 1993; Cabinet
- Secretaries' from $99,500 to $155,000; and most federal judges'
- from $89,500 to $135,000. President Reagan included those
- recommendations in the 1990-fiscal-year budget he submitted to
- Congress last week, thereby initiating a process by which the
- proposed pay hikes will become effective Feb. 8 -- unless they
- are rejected by both houses.
- </p>
- <p> When last faced with the opportunity to turn thumbs down on a
- salary hike, the Senate in 1987 voted 88-6 against a $12,100
- increase -- fully confident that the House would save the day.
- After Representatives denounced the raises in furious speeches,
- the House also rejected pay raises in a voice vote. There was
- only one hitch: the debate took place after the 30-day waiting
- period had expired and the raises had already gone into effect.
- </p>
- <p> A similar charade is now taking place against the opposition
- of only a handful of legislators. New Hampshire Republican
- Senator Gordon Humphrey has called for an early Senate vote,
- followed by "public pressure on the House to hold a vote before
- the deadline." In the House, Wisconsin Republican Tom Petri has
- demanded that Speaker Jim Wright require a vote on the raises
- before the waiting period expires. "If we lack the courage to
- face an issue as clear cut as that of lining our own pockets,"
- Petri asked, "how can we expect the public to have confidence
- in us on more complicated issues?" Petri's question will go
- unanswered: Wright has not even scheduled a debate on the issue.
- </p>
- <p> The recommendations by the commission do have a catch, sort
- of. In exchange for the pay increase, it urges Congress to ban
- the lucrative speaking fees doled out by companies and lobbies
- interested in making friends on Capitol Hill. House members are
- allowed to pocket up to $26,850 in honorariums annually;
- Senators can keep $35,800. Last year Representatives took in an
- average of $12,000 in honorariums; for Senators, the median was
- $23,000. Skeptics warn that once the pay raise goes into
- effect, the pressure on Congress to do away with honorariums
- will inevitably tail off.
- </p>
- <p> Apart from drying up a source of ethically questionable
- payments, the most convincing rationale for raising government
- pay is that better salaries will attract highly qualified
- people to government service. But while that logic may apply to
- the top-notch executives needed for senior posts in Cabinet
- departments and lawyers skilled enough to adorn the federal
- bench, it has little to do with Congress. Despite the alleged
- financial hardships of congressional service, vacant House and
- Senate seats never go begging. And few incumbents ever retire
- because of financial straits.
- </p>
- <p> While some younger Congressmen with growing families find it
- hard to maintain homes in both high-priced Washington and their
- home states, many others are not pinched. At least 1 out of
- every 3 Senators is a millionaire. Although many newly elected
- lawmakers arrive relatively impecunious, those who remain in
- office long enough often become wealthy.
- </p>
- <p> Critics like Ralph Nader point out that congressional
- expenses are one of the fastest-growing areas in the federal
- budget. "Congressional pay is 48% higher than it was in 1980,
- and now they say they deserve more," charges the consumer
- advocate. "Our power elite wants to be an economic elite as
- well." In a report last year, Nader noted that in 1988 Congress
- spent $1.97 billion just to keep itself going, $220 million
- more than the previous year.
- </p>
- <p> Most of the expenditures are devoted to genuine legislative
- needs. Each House member, for example, receives $411,099 to hire
- aides as well as a sum ranging from $105,000 to $360,000 to rent
- office space in his district. A minimum of $67,000 is provided
- for office, telephones and travel back and forth between
- Washington and home base. Senators receive larger allocations
- in these categories. In addition, members of both houses have
- the privilege of sending unlimited free "franked" mail to their
- constituents (at a total cost of $113 million in 1988) and the
- use of recording studios located in the Capitol to prepare spots
- for broadcast to the folks back home.
- </p>
- <p> But Congress has also granted its members a package of
- fringe benefits cushy enough to provoke the envy of all but the
- best compensated private executives. Plenty of the perks go
- well beyond generous pensions and insurance: cheap haircuts in
- subsidized House and Senate hair salons; free entry to a
- members-only gymnasium; special license tags permitting
- ticket-free parking anyplace in Washington except in front of
- fire hydrants, fire stations and loading docks; at-home access
- to long-distance telephone lines over which the member or his
- family can call without charge.
- </p>
- <p> In a society that rewards good work with hard cash, Congress
- may deserve a raise. The great majority of Congressmen are
- dedicated public servants who face awesome responsibilities as
- they attempt to steer the U.S. through a difficult and uncertain
- time. But at the very least, the public deserves a forthright
- debate on the matter before its representatives give themselves
- a big raise. Instead they are slipping it through the back door.
- </p>
-
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