Kane Republican

NY legislator­s pass bill making them nation's best-paid

- By Maysoon Khan Associated Press/report for America

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — Just in time for Christmas, New York legislator­s returned to the state capital Thursday to give themselves a nice holiday gift: a pay raise that would make them the nation's bestpaid state lawmakers.

Members of the state Assembly and Senate would make a base salary of $142,000 under a bill they passed during a special session, a 29% raise over their salary of $110,000.

That would send them racing ahead of state lawmakers in California, who are now the nation's best-paid legislator­s with a yearly base pay of about $119,000, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es.

New York's lawmakers, however, would also face restrictio­ns for the first time on how much they can make from other jobs.

Outside income would be capped at $35,000, starting in 2025. Pay in excess of that from military service, retirement plans or investment­s would still be allowed.

Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewartcou­sins, a Democrat, said legislator­s work hard, year round, and deserved a raise to cover the increased cost of living.

“It's a full time job,” she said. “Sooner or later in order to be able to afford to do the job, we have to raise pay.”

Senate Republican Leader Rob Ortt said he found the raise “patently offensive to the people we represent."

“Albany's One Party Ruling Class continues to put their own misplaced priorities first," Ortt said in a statement.

Gov. Kathy Hochul, a Democrat, has said she supports the idea of a raise for the Legislatur­e, but hasn't said whether she would sign the bill. Email and text messages left for the governor's office weren't immediatel­y returned.

Some government transparen­cy and watchdog groups said after the bill was introduced late Monday that it doesn't do enough for regulating outside income.

“The public really deserves to know that their elected officials are working just for them and they don't have any other interests in mind," said Rachael Fauss, a senior policy advisor at the government watchdog group Reinvent Albany.

Members of the U.S. Congress, for example, are excluded from making any outside income while they are in office from certain profession­s that could pose conflicts of interest, such as being a lawyer.

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