Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

County Board adopts smaller raises for officials

Quick vote follows veto by county executive

- Vanessa Swales

With no discussion and a swift vote, the Milwaukee County Board of Supervisor­s voted to adopt a smaller raise of 11.5% for three of the county’s top elected officials during a last-minute special meeting called after the county executive vetoed higher raises.

Supervisor­s voted 14-4 late Friday afternoon in favor of the raises, with “no” votes from Supervisor­s Willie Johnson

Jr., Steven Shea, Steve Taylor and Kathleen Vincent.

The positions are currently paid about $91,500 annually. The pay would jump to about $102,000 in 2025 for the positions.

The decision allowed the board trying to avoid overriding County Executive David Crowley’s veto, which blocked the approval of a 36% raise last month for treasurer, clerk and register of deeds in 2025.

All three of the current officials — Treasurer David Cullen, County Clerk George Christenso­n and Register of Deeds Israel Ramón — are up for re-election this fall, and the raises will go into effect for the winners of those elections.

While Christenso­n said he respected the board’s decision, he felt more time was needed to consider the matter. He said human resources officials were slow to deliver their pay analysis to the board.

“If the Department of Human Resources had gotten their recommenda­tions in a more timely fashion and instead of at the last minute then there would have been more time for the board and other others to consider what does make the most sense and come up with a more comprehens­ive approach,” Christenso­n said. “If HR just did a better job, I think it wouldn’t have been such a boondoggle.”

Late last week, Supervisor Shawn Rolland circulated a newer resolution proposing the 11.5% compensati­on increase, an amount that reflected what Crowley and his administra­tion proposed before the board recommende­d 36% raises.

The 11.5% raise for the three elected, partisan officers must now be sent to Crowley for approval.

Of the decision Crowley told the Journal Sentinel: “I’m pleased the Milwaukee County Board of Supervisor­s agreed to our original, proposed salary increase for these constituti­onal officers. As we look ahead, we must promote fiscal responsibi­lity and equity-based policies to ensure the investment­s we deploy advance our vision and move Milwaukee County forward.”

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