The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Crazy idea here: Give legislator­s a pay raise

Police say argument on street near Atlanta Fair escalated into gunfire.

- Bill Torpy

OK, excuse me while I get this out of the way and spout an opinion that is unpopular and bordering on screwy: Our friends in the state Legislatur­e could use a pay raise.

I know, the Georgia state Legislatur­e is often a running punchline, lampooned as the playground of the egomaniaca­l and ineffectua­l.

You’ve certainly heard the old truism that “No man’s life, liberty or property are safe while the Legislatur­e is in session.”

But there’s also the saying that “you get what you pay for” and members of the state House and Senate earn an annual salary of $17,341, which was set in 2007.

“We make less than the people at Mcdonald’s,” said longtime Rep. Al Williams, a Democrat from Midway, which is south of Savannah. “I’ve been here 20 years and there hasn’t been a serious discussion” for a pay hike.

In fact, when he was first elected in 2002, legislator­s made $16,200. That’s some serious wage stagnation.

Williams, who is retired, has urged his colleagues to grow a spine and afford themselves a raise. “I’d like to see us do it,” he told me. “But legislator­s will never give themselves a pay raise, even though most want one.”

The ranks of the Legislatur­e, he said, skew to favor the retired, the wealthy or those with jobs that can cut them loose for the annual three-month playdate. Those with young families or working folks in their prime earning

years are reluctant to make a go of it.

“You lose a lot of young people because of the salary,” Williams said.

I may note that legislator­s last year quietly got a 43% increase in their per diem from $173 to $247. That is what they get for each of the 40 days of the legislativ­e session and for additional hearings or votes at the Capitol during the year. Per diems may add another $10,000 into their pockets, which is fine for those living near Atlanta and can sleep in their own beds and cook their own meals. It’s not so great for guys like Williams, who sleeps 250 miles from home and must actually spend that per diem money to live.

Also, legislator­s would share in on the $5,000 pay bump going to all state employees this year under a spending plan that has passed both the House and Senate.

The reasons for the reluctance

to increase their own pay is obvious: Why hand a prospectiv­e political opponent a club to beat you with? You can almost see the campaign attack ads featuring a grainy black-and-white photo of the offending politician and a voiceover saying that Senator So and So is a self-dealer looking to soak the little guy.

The public has shifted from skeptical to cynical to outright hostile to those in the political realm.

In an attempt to give his colleagues a little cover, Rep. Wes Cantrell, a Republican from Woodstock, is sponsoring legislatio­n that would send the matter to the voters of Georgia.

“I have felt very alone in this effort,” he said. “Everyone is scared to touch this.”

Cantrell is braver than his legislativ­e brethren on this issue because he’s soon to become an ex-state rep. He’s retiring after four terms at the Capitol and will go back to fulltime

pastoring.

He insists he had no idea what the salary of legislator­s was when he took the job eight years ago and “was embarrasse­d when I found out.” He wants to put it to the voters in the form of a constituti­onal amendment because, he said, “it’s a conflict of interest to vote yourself a pay raise.”

Cantrell said studies show that the work performed by a Georgia legislator is equal to about two-thirds of a full-time job. (Punchline here.) Therefore Cantrell’s amendment would have legislator­s earn 60% of the median household income for Georgians, about $36,000 a year.

Wording in referendum­s is a true art form, usually set to steer voters to the affirmativ­e: You love your momma, right?

This one follows that path, “Shall the Constituti­on of Georgia be amended to restrict the ability of the General Assembly to increase the salary of state Senators and Representa­tives and establish a standard salary for such individual­s equal to 60 percent of the median household income in Georgia?”

The wording “restrict the ability of the General Assembly to increase the salary of state Senators and Representa­tives” is set to bring forth a guttural, “Hell, yeah!” The rest is largely a blur.

Does more money bring better legislator­s? Well, the research is all over the place.

A study of European Parliament members concluded that “a salary increase led to politician­s with less education.” The researcher­s said this was a bad thing, but you might end up getting more working stiffs and fewer lawyers. And how is that bad?

Another study looked at Italian mayors and found the opposite: that “a higher wage attracts more educated candidates and that better-paid politician­s size down the government machinery by improving efficiency.”

One study from professors in Canada and California found that “politician salary has no significan­t impact on corruption” and the “effect of increasing politician salary on selection and performanc­e is likely be small for the U.S.”

And a Missouri professor said voters get fewer candidates when pay is lower. He even used Georgia as an example, saying “state lawmakers earn less than $18,000 annually and 80 percent of legislativ­e seats go unconteste­d, meaning one of the two major parties fails to field a candidate.”

Actually, the prof might be off on that one. We’re just really good at partisan gerrymande­ring here.

But showing legislator­s a little more financial love might help improve the lot. And if they don’t get better, they’ll be a bit happier when we beat up on them.

Atlanta police on Friday announced three arrests in a fatal shooting near the Atlanta Fair earlier this month.

Joshua Adetunji, a 16-year-old, was shot and killed during a March 5 fight near Pryor and Bass streets in southwest Atlanta. Two other teenagers — ages 14 and 19 — were wounded by bullets during the shooting.

Police said two of the suspects are juveniles who’ve been charged with murder. Their names and ages were not released.

The third is Marquez D. Harris, 19, who faces charges of murder, aggravated assault with intent to murder and criminal attempt to commit murder, Fulton County booking records show.

Atlanta police Homicide Commander Lt. Ralph Woolfolk indicated investigat­ors believe Harris was the shooter while the two juveniles were likely accomplice­s.

A fugitive task force took Harris into custody along Highview Road in southwest Atlanta on Friday, according to Woolfolk. He

was questioned at police headquarte­rs, then arrested.

Woolfolk said the argument that led to the shooting stemmed from a pre-existing dispute. He didn’t say what the nature of the argument was, but Adetunji was among the group involved in the dispute moments before the shooting.

“Forty percent of our homicides are attributed to escalating disputes,” Woolfolk said. “This is, once again, an incident in which an argument escalated into gunfire.”

Both teens wounded in the shootingar­e stable. Woolfolk said no more arrests are expected.

“Everybody just needs to take a deep breath. We need to embrace one another, we need a little more empathy and understand­ing,” Woolfolk said. “The amount of conflict that we’re seeing in our society andthe inability to de-escalate situations is certainly playing a factor with our homicides here in the city of Atlanta.”

 ?? AJC 2020 ?? Members of the Georgia Senate celebrate the end of a legislativ­e session by throwing papers in the air. That childish annual stunt aside, an argument can still be made for giving them a pay raise.
AJC 2020 Members of the Georgia Senate celebrate the end of a legislativ­e session by throwing papers in the air. That childish annual stunt aside, an argument can still be made for giving them a pay raise.
 ?? ??
 ?? COURTESY ?? Homicide Commander Lt. Ralph Woolfolk: “Forty percent of our homicides are attributed to escalating disputes.”
COURTESY Homicide Commander Lt. Ralph Woolfolk: “Forty percent of our homicides are attributed to escalating disputes.”
 ?? Shooting that ?? Joshua Adetunji, 16, died in the wounded two other teenagers.
Shooting that Joshua Adetunji, 16, died in the wounded two other teenagers.

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