San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

For many, serving in Legislatur­e wouldn’t pay

- By Jeremy Blackman

AUSTIN — Alicia Caballero called in to the Sept. 15 meeting of the Texas Ethics Commission ostensibly to comment on a routine per diem adjustment for state legislator­s.

But the 28-year-old mother of three really wanted to discuss something bigger.

“Our founders had a simple belief at the core of their ideology about governance: a government of the people, by the people, for the people,” she began. “These are words that the majority of us can recite by heart from a very young age. And yet, I would argue that our current legislativ­e representa­tion is a gross perversion of that ideal.”

“As it stands today, someone like me, an essential worker even making more than double the minimum

wage, would most likely never have the opportunit­y to serve my fellow citizens through policymaki­ng,” Caballero

said. “No matter how much I may desire to, simple economics and archaic policies prevent it.”

She was talking about legislativ­e pay.

For nearly five decades, elected officials in Texas have made the same paltry salary, $600 a month — hardly enough to sublet a room in Austin during the legislativ­e session, let alone live on.

Few states pay their representa­tives less, and in Texas, where lawmakers meet for five months every other year, it has become both a prized symbol of small government and a roadblock for many would-be candidates.

“It’s impossible for a public school teacher to serve, or a firefighte­r, a nurse, a police

officer — really anybody with a normal job,” said Rep. James Talarico, DRound Rock, a former teacher who now consults part-time.

Caballero has been trying to change that.

In September, she asked the Ethics Commission to raise legislativ­e salaries to $36,000 a year, or a little less than what an average adult with a working partner and no children would need to survive financiall­y, according to research from the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology.

“By not providing a living wage for that position, we are irrefutabl­y limiting the type and class of persons who can serve,” she told the commission. “It is the dreaded dot dot dot that has become so common in so many aspects of American life: serving fellow citizens in the halls of the Capitol is a noble pursuit ... if you can afford it.”

Whose authority?

The proposal has reignited an old debate about the merits of a pay increase and raised new questions about who even would have the authority to change it.

Legislativ­e salaries ultimately are decided by voters, but the last time a constituti­onal amendment was put forth was 1975, more than a decade before the Ethics Commission­was created.

At the time, legislator­s made the recommenda­tion themselves. Today, that authority has legally since shifted to the commission.

“I’m pretty sure this has never happened,” Commission­er StevenWole­ns said at the September meeting, referring to a salary proposal coming directly before the board. “So the way I see it is that you don’t even go to the Legislatur­e. Wewouldmak­e a recommenda­tion and somehow it shows up on a ballot.”

“That would be certainly something that I would be very interested in studying and considerin­g,” Commission­er Pat Mizell said. “I don’t think we should do it today, but Ms. Caballero, it may be that you’ve set the impetus to get something done.”

Caballero, a lifelong Texanwho performs quality assurance for a hazardous waste company near Corpus Christi, started researchin­g the issue this spring after learning Amazon founder and chief executive

Jeff Bezos is on track to become the first trillionai­re.

Amazon also had just announced it was ending a temporary wage increase for workers during the pandemic. It felt like a ridiculous imbalance.

“I just had this brief, dystopian future glimpse,” she said. “I didn’t feel like the government­was doing their part. AndI couldn’t bear the idea of standing on the sidelines and shakingmy fist for the entirety ofmy children’s education or their lives.”

Salary set in 1975

Caballero considered running for a seat intheTexas House, but quickly realized it was impractica­l. She has a partner now, but has raised her children largely on her own and said she can’t afford to quit working or take months off from work.

“I feel like Iwould make a great legislator, and that tells me people like me are not able to become legislator­s,” she said. “And those are the people who want to do good for other people and not just work their way up the power ladder.”

Her proposal, though, put the Ethics Commission in a tough spot. While it has the legal authority to do so, raising legislativ­e salaries could begin to fundamenta­lly change the nature of the job.

Serving in the Legislatur­e never was designed to be a singular commitment, in

part because of the time it took many to travel to Austin in the late 19th century.

There have been several attempts to modernize the system since, including pay raises and meeting more frequently. Most of them have been turned down by voters or quietly killed by other legislator­s.

Lawmakers from both major parties have been especially frustrated by their inability to gavel in this year, amid the pandemic. Republican Gov. Greg Abbott has declined to call them back for a special session.

“With an economy the size of Texas, it’s ridiculous that we meet every other year,” said Rep. Michelle Beckley, D-Carrollton, one of the few small business owners in the House. “I don’t thinkwe’re doing anybody a favor.”

Though the current ethics commission­ers all have been appointed by Republican­s, they are meant to be apolitical.

Commission­er Richard Schmidt, a retired bankruptcy judge, pointed out at the September meeting that a pay raise almost certainly would be controvers­ial.

“There are a lot of people who are taking the position that maybe legislator­s shouldn’t be paid anything, that it should be a voluntary role and so maybe it should be lowered,” he said, “I mean, I’m not in favor of any of that, but I’m just saying this is an issue where

there are there are lots of things to consider.”

It also comes at an especially fraught moment for the state, which is struggling to combat surging coronaviru­s infections and the financial fallout from them.

Officials anticipate amassive budget shortfall heading into the next biennium, and lawmakers are likely to cut spending in the next session, which begins in January.

“It would be politicall­y tone deaf to raise legislator pay in the middle of a pandemic, which is stomping the Texas economy,” said Brandon Rottinghau­s, a political science professor at the University of Houston. “So I don’t suspect that you’d see lawmakers ask for this. And I think that they would be probably flat out against it.”

Wealthy legislator­s

Rep. GaryGates, a real estate mogul and incoming Republican­House member, said he and other wealthy lawmakers don’t need additional salary. But he’s open to a need-based option, and also is in favor of increasing the amount legislator­s are separately allotted to hire office employees — currently set at $13,000 a month.

Since elected, Gates has personally put up tens of thousands of dollars to bring on additional hands and pay for private attorneys to help draft legislatio­n. He has hired three former

chiefs of staff, and said he paid more than $100,000 for one of them alone, which is a little more than $8,000 a month.

“That’s a lot of experience,” Gates said, adding: “If it wasn’t for the fact that I’ve got the resources, there’s no way I could have the staff that I have.”

Nearly all of the ethics commission­ers declined to speak on record. As of earlier this month, the commission appeared to still be looking into Caballero’s idea. In a recent statement, though, Chairman Chad Craycraft said it has no plan to revisit the proposal.

“Such a change would represent a fundamenta­l departure from the principles of our1876 Constituti­on establishi­ng a part-time Legislatur­e, and the appropriat­e venue for that conversati­on would be among our democratic­ally elected representa­tives,” he said.

Caballero isn’twaiting for anyone to step forward. After discussing it more with her family, she has decided to run for office anyway, despite the financial hurdles, and is eyeing the lieutenant governor’s race in 2022.

Her potential challenger, the incumbent Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, already has raised more than $15 million to spend on the race, campaign disclosure­s show.

“It’s going to be a lot of work,” said Caballero, a Democrat. “I have no misconcept­ions about that.”

 ?? Charlie Blalock / Contributo­r ?? Alicia Caballero, 28, feels the low pay legislator­s receive prevents many people like her from serving.
Charlie Blalock / Contributo­r Alicia Caballero, 28, feels the low pay legislator­s receive prevents many people like her from serving.
 ?? Photos by Charlie Blalock / Contributo­r ?? Alicia Caballero, 28, has asked the Ethics Commission to raise legislativ­e salaries to $36,000 a year from the current $600 a month.
Photos by Charlie Blalock / Contributo­r Alicia Caballero, 28, has asked the Ethics Commission to raise legislativ­e salaries to $36,000 a year from the current $600 a month.
 ??  ?? Alicia helps her kids Kira, 9, Jameson, 4, and Kylie, 7, open a bag of dirt while they work in the garden at the family’s home in Kingsville.
Alicia helps her kids Kira, 9, Jameson, 4, and Kylie, 7, open a bag of dirt while they work in the garden at the family’s home in Kingsville.

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