New York Daily News

Yay, pay hike

1st raise for pols in 20 years

- BY KENNETH LOVETT

ALBANY — Government reform groups praised a commission's decision to raise state lawmakers' salaries for the first time in 20 years while also imposing restrictio­ns on outside income and legislativ­e stipends.

"The commission has done an excellent job of balancing the public interest against the very real need to raise lawmakers' pay,” said Common Cause/NY Executive Director Susan Lerner.

Lerner said tying the raises to limited outside income and eliminatin­g most stipends lets the public know “that the people representi­ng them are there to serve them only, and no one else.”

A pay panel commission consisting of current and former state and New York City controller­s created by Gov. Cuomo and the Legislatur­e in this year's budget on Thursday pushed through a plan to raise over three years legislativ­e salaries from the current base of $79,500 to $130,000, which will be the highest state lawmaker pay in the country.

The commission said it also had the power to require that lawmakers by 2020 restrict any outside income to the congressio­nal model of 15% of their legislativ­e salaries and immediatel­y eliminate most stipends for chairing committees, serving as ranking minority members or holding most leadership posts. Some stipends, including those for serving as Assembly speaker and Senate majority leader, will remain.

While acknowledg­ing that “questions remain regarding the specific details and legal authority of the committee,” government reform group Reinvent Albany said it backs the broad principles of the commission's decision.

Reinvent New York says after 20 years, lawmakers deserve significan­t pay raises, but also believes the limitation­s on outside income and stipends are long needed reforms.

“The public deserves a government in which state officials and electeds are focused on serving the public interest, and can represent New Yorkers free of outside entangleme­nts or pressures from leadership leveraged through stipends,” the group said in a statement.

Blair Horner, of the New York Public Interest Research Group, said that the commission's decision does not go far enough in addressing the scandals that have rocked the state Capitol in recent years, including those in the governor's office. “While we agree that the Congressio­nal model is an appropriat­e to regulate legislator­s' outside income, advancing a reform in this area alone is inadequate,” Horner said. “Given the stunning payto-play scandals that have rocked government, reforms in that area must be addressed. Failure to do so highlights the inadequacy of the reform package.”

 ??  ?? Susan Lerner, of Common Cause, liked the pay-raise deal for state pols, but watchdog Blair Horner said more pay reforms are needed.
Susan Lerner, of Common Cause, liked the pay-raise deal for state pols, but watchdog Blair Horner said more pay reforms are needed.
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