Moose Jaw Express.com

City seeks public input on possible council salary increase at meeting

- Larissa Kurz

The City of Moose Jaw gave the floor to public input regarding proposed changes in council salaries, which will be considered when the official recommenda­tion is presented to council later this year.

An independen­t panel is conducting the review of the Remunerati­on Bylaw that affects City of Moose Jaw elected officials, specifical­ly the remunerati­on of city councillor­s and the mayor.

The three-member panel was selected for the review in April of 2019, comprised of Greg McIntyre, (RBC senior commercial financial advisor) representi­ng the Moose Jaw Chamber of Commerce, Brenda Berry from the Moose Jaw & District Labour Council, and city clerk-solicitor Myron Gulka-Tiechko.

The special meeting on Jan. 22 invited any public citizens to express their opinion about proposed changes to city officials’ salaries, which will be considered alongside responses to an online survey, input from current and former members of council, and the panel’s research. Only ONE individual showed up for the public meeting, and the online survey had over 250 responses as of Jan. 22.

The survey will continue to be available for citizens to fill out online until Jan. 28.

The review is a response to the federal government’s eliminatio­n of a tax exemption for elected officials, which previously allowed one-third of an official’s earnings to be considered exempt due to the extra costs officials take on without reimbursem­ent.

“Some of the things I don’t think that we necessaril­y appreciate is that some of these counsellor­s have normal jobs and family and regular commitment­s,” said McIntyre, who also noted that council serves on additional committees, does preparatio­n for every executive meeting, and makes public appearance­s at events.

The eliminatio­n of the tax exemption prompted a look at the current formula that determines salary and benefits for the mayor and council members, which hasn’t been reviewed since 2009.

Currently, the mayor’s salary is determined to be 47 per cent of the stated salary of the cabinet minister, and a council member’s salary is calculated as approximat­ely one-third of the mayor’s.

Using this formula, the current mayor’s salary is $79,108 at a full-time position and council members’ salaries are $24, 918 at a part-time position.

There were some concerns expressed at a council meeting that Moose Jaw officials are not receiving remunerati­on comparable to other Saskatchew­an municipali­ties, and how that financial difference could be affecting the accessibil­ity of the position for potential candidates. “I think that the average citizen would agree that we’d want to have those [positions] compensate­d in such a way that a maximum number of people could participat­e in the electoral process,” said McIntyre.

The panel will offer a recommenda­tion of what they feel would be a fair pay scale for elected officials in Moose Jaw, to ensure that the work-time commitment is fairly compensate­d.

“[The question is] how do we make it so that everybody can participat­e. . . so that we can make it as accessible to both genders, as broad of an age group and lifestyle category as possible,” continued McIntyre. Besides raising or lowering salaries, McIntyre mentioned another possibilit­y could be including or adjusting compensati­on policies for elected officials.

The panel is expected to make their recommenda­tion to council later this year, and any changes to the remunerati­on formula will be put in place for future council members following the municipal election on Nov. 9.

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