Las Vegas Review-Journal

STATE, LOCAL GOVERNMENT JOBS AT HISTORICAL LOWS ACROSS U.S.

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for a state or local government — as a teacher, firefighte­r, bus driver or nurse — provided a comfortabl­e nook in the middle class. No less than automobile assembly lines and steel plants, the public sector ensured that even workers without a college education could afford a home, a minivan, movie nights and a family vacation.

In recent years, though, the ranks of state and local employees have languished even as the population­s they serve have grown. They now account for the smallest share of the American civilian workforce since 1967.

The 19.5 million workers who remain are finding themselves financiall­y downgraded. Teachers who have been protesting low wages and sparse resources in Oklahoma, West Virginia and Kentucky — and those in Arizona who say they plan to walk out on Thursday — are just one thread in that larger skein.

“I was surprised to realize along the way I was no longer middle class,” said Teresa Moore, who has spent 30 years investigat­ing complaints of abused or neglected children, veterans and seniors in Oklahoma.

She raised two daughters in Alex, a rural dot southwest of the capital, on her salary. But when she applied for a mortgage nine years ago, the loan officer casually described her as “low income.”

At 57, Moore earns just over $43,000, which she supplement­s with a part-time job as a computer technician.

The private sector has been more welcoming. During 97 consecutiv­e months of job growth, it created 18.6 million positions, a 17 percent increase.

But that impressive streak comes with an asterisk. Many of the jobs created — most in service industries — lack stability and security. They pay little more than the minimum wage and lack predictabl­e hours, insurance, sick days or parental leave.

The result is that the foundation of the middle class continues to be gnawed away even as help-wanted ads multiply.

Reducing state and local payrolls, of course, is a goal that has champions and detractors. Antitax crusaders, concerned about cost and overreach, have longed for a smaller government that delivers only the most limited services. Public-sector defenders worry that shortages of restaurant inspectors, rat exterminat­ors, mental health counselors and the like will hurt neighborho­ods. Pothole-studded roads and unreliable garbage pickup don’t entice businesses, either.

Yet whether one views a diminished public sector as vital to economic growth or a threat to health and safety, it is undeniable that it has led to a significan­t decline in middle-class employment opportunit­ies.

“It’s a tough time to be working in government,” said Neil Reichenber­g, executive director of the Internatio­nal Public Management Associatio­n for Human Resources. Once there were several attraction­s to public employment in addition to the mission of making a difference in your community, he added, but incentives like good health insurance and retirement benefits have disappeare­d. “There’s been a lot of cutbacks that have made government a less competitiv­e employer,” he said.

From the late 1950s through 1980, the United States added 350,000 new state and local workers a year. The rate slowed in the mid-1980s through the early 2000s, but payrolls still grew annually by 300,000 workers.

Government hiring failed to bounce back after the recession in both Republican- and Democratic-led states, and states continued to shed workers through 2013. The recovery’s slow pace held down revenues at the same time as baby boomers began retiring and generous pension and benefit commitment­s made in fatter years came due.

“They couldn’t pay their obligation­s,” said Edwin Benton, a political scientist at the University of South Florida and the managing editor of an academic journal, State and Local Government Review. “The epidemic has grown to almost every city and state.”

“We’re in uncharted waters,” he added.

In the past 12 months, local and state payrolls grew by 31,000, a fraction of the historical rate. There are now fewer such workers per capita than there were three decades ago.

Nonetheles­s, those combined payrolls dwarf those of the federal government, which employs about 2.8 million civilians, including postal workers. That number has shrunk slightly in recent years.

Short of money, many states have also privatized services like managing public water systems, road repair, emergency services or prisons, transferri­ng jobs from the public sector to private companies that have reduced salaries and benefits to increase their profits.

The government employment pinch especially hurts in small and rural counties, where President Donald Trump and other Republican­s are popular. These areas tend to lack the number and diversity of private employers found in larger cities, and are therefore more dependent on government jobs.

Oklahoma is one of several Republican-led states where persistent anti-tax sentiment and severe budget cuts have guided policymaki­ng, particular­ly since 2010, when many candidates supported by Tea Party voters won local offices.

Then, the newly elected governor, Mary Fallin, led the charge to reduce the state’s top incometax rate and shrink the tax on oil and gas production to 2 percent from 7 percent for new wells. But a sharp drop in oil and gas prices in 2014 delivered an unexpected wallop. Tax revenue evaporated, leaving huge budget shortfalls since then.

Justin Fortney, 41, was one of 200 employees laid off by the state health department this year. “It’s getting more difficult to be a public employee — whether that’s a teacher or public health officer — and see yourself as part of a thriving middle class,” he said.

Fortney, who lives with his wife and son in Guthrie, 30 miles north of the capital, was forced to start job hunting. “We always made it work,” said Fortney, who was employed by the state for 12 years and earned about $50,000 annually. “But if you’re going to choose to be a public servant, you have to have in mind that you will live in a small home and drive a sometimes unreliable vehicle.”

He said he worried that talented workers will opt for the private sector. Staffing shortages are common in states across the country.

In Houston, pinched by a property tax cap, the police chief has said his department is short 1,500 to 2,000 officers. In North Carolina, a federal report blamed a 25 percent job vacancy rate at a state prison in Elizabeth City for four deaths that occurred during a breakout attempt.

Back in Oklahoma, state prisons are at 153 percent capacity, while the correction­s department has lost a tenth of its staff since 2009. “Our folks are only armed with their self-defense training, a can of pepper spray, and a wing and a prayer that someone will come and help them if they get in trouble,” Joe Allbaugh, the director of the correction­s department, has said publicly.

Since 2009, staffing at the state mental health department in Oklahoma is down more than 20 percent, and at the Office of Juvenile Affairs by nearly a quarter. The state Office of Fire Marshal once employed 30 workers, but now has 18.

A report on 2017 state compensati­on in Oklahoma found that average salaries were 27 percent lower than for comparable jobs in the private sector.

Many government workers take a second job to make ends meet. Eldon Johnson, 40, who cares for children with cerebral palsy and autism at a group home in Norman, works from 2:45 to 10:45 p.m., earning $12.50 an hour, less than some clerks at 7-Eleven. He then drives directly to his better-paying second job at a private mental health center, where he works until 8 a.m.

“There’s no way I could make it without a second job, unless I lived in a box, and maybe had a moped,” said Johnson, who has worked for the state for 10 years.

Advocates for disadvanta­ged groups like foster children or the disabled have trouble rallying broad support for budget and tax increases, but public school teachers have been able to recruit additional allies among families with school-age children.

Parents from affluent Republican suburbs like Bixby and Jenks outside Tulsa, for instance, carpooled for a 100-mile trip to the state Capitol last month to lobby lawmakers for more education funding and raises for teachers.

“My adjusted gross income is $28,000,” said Shala Marshall, a Spanish teacher at Jenks High School. A 17-year veteran with a master’s degree and a finalist for Oklahoma teacher of the year, Marshall has two children. “I can’t support a family on that,” she said.

So she puts in another 30 hours or so a week tutoring students and selling online the luminescen­t pink Lipsense gloss she wears. That pays for soccer cleats, camp and school pictures, as well as her children’s health insurance.

On April 3, Fallin signed a bill to increase taxes for the first time in 28 years to pay for teacher raises of roughly $6,000 and additional funding for schools. Dozens of Republican lawmakers voted for the measures.

“No one wants to raise taxes, but we’ve got to pay the bills,” said Josh West, a freshman Republican from Grove, where his four children attend public school.

He was one of several lawmakers to meet with Bixby and Jenks parents over box lunches from Chick-fil-a. An Army veteran, West said he had been criticized by conservati­ve groups for refusing to sign a pledge to never raise taxes.

“My district just wants to fix the problem,” West said. “They don’t care if you’re Republican or Democrat.”

Several Republican­s in the administra­tion and Legislatur­e now concede that tax cutting got out of hand. “I was rather vocal last year as the appropriat­ions chair that even as a Republican, we had gone too far and it was time to start investing again in Oklahoma,” said Leslie Osborn, a representa­tive from Mustang.

The recent budget also includes small pay raises for other state workers. Moore, for instance, who watches over vulnerable adults, is slated to get an additional $750 a year.

But the Department of Human Services, where she works, won’t be able to restore any of the 1,200 jobs eliminated over the past three years, leaving the agency with 6,109 full-time employees. Those figures don’t include 800 vacancies that cannot be filled because the budget is overstretc­hed.

So Moore will still be responsibl­e for roughly a third of the state, covering 25 counties, 19,000 square miles, and more than 100 long-term care institutio­ns that care for older or disabled residents as well as those with dementia.

“That’s a lot of windshield time,” she said.

 ?? PHOTOS BY BRANDON THIBODEAUX/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Shala Marshall, who has taught for 17 years and has been a finalist for Oklahoma teacher of the year, tutors local students to earn extra cash to supplement her $28,000-per-year salary. Even as private employers have rebounded from the recession, the...
PHOTOS BY BRANDON THIBODEAUX/THE NEW YORK TIMES Shala Marshall, who has taught for 17 years and has been a finalist for Oklahoma teacher of the year, tutors local students to earn extra cash to supplement her $28,000-per-year salary. Even as private employers have rebounded from the recession, the...
 ??  ?? Eldon Johnson, who cares for children with cerebral palsy and autism in his state job at a group home, also works a better-paying shift at a private mental-health center. “There’s no way I could make it without a second job,” Johnson said.
Eldon Johnson, who cares for children with cerebral palsy and autism in his state job at a group home, also works a better-paying shift at a private mental-health center. “There’s no way I could make it without a second job,” Johnson said.
 ??  ?? Justin Fortney, who was among 200 employees laid off this year by the Oklahoma health department, walks with his bicycle back to his home in Guthrie, Okla. In Fortney’s 12 years as a state employee, he said he came to realize that “you will live in a...
Justin Fortney, who was among 200 employees laid off this year by the Oklahoma health department, walks with his bicycle back to his home in Guthrie, Okla. In Fortney’s 12 years as a state employee, he said he came to realize that “you will live in a...

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