Are Connecticut state workers overpaid? I don’t think so.
Connecticut
state employees are about to get a retroactive, four-year
contract that gives them a $3500 bonus, annual 2.5% pay increases and their “step
increases” tied to seniority and their jobs.
By one estimate, this all works out to an additional $10,000 per worker
over four years.
Total cost to taxpayers: $1.86 billion.
Watching the legislature
debate this package I had to chuckle. Despite
all the fuss and bluster, this now looks like a sweetheart
deal compared to what would be negotiated in today’s
era of hyper-inflation. Just 2.5%? A
bargain!
State employees, at least the
46,000 represented in this SEBAC contract, are clearly well paid, in some cases
making more than their counterparts in the private sector. Well paid, but not over paid.
Why? Because state workers are still quitting in
record numbers and their places are not getting filled. It’s all about supply and demand.
Retirements from Hartford usually
average about 2000 staffers a year. This
year it’s been 3400 so far with a flood of more retirements expected before
July 1st when new rules take effect.
Where do these retirees
go? Trust me, they’re not sitting on a
beach somewhere smoking Macanudos. Most
go to work as consultants in “the private sector”.
I still see my old friends
from CDOT (from my almost 20 years on the Commuter Council) at meetings and
events. They’re still working in the
transportation business but now they dress better and have nicer cars. And, of course, they took their fat state pensions
with them.
But how is that any different
than the cop or the firefighter who pads his final year with overtime and does
the same thing, transitioning into a security job or opening a deli?
Are they anymore overpaid than
the dot-com code-writer who jumps from job to job for better money and
perks? Or the investment banker who
pulls down a good salary and still gets six figure annual bonuses? Are they overpaid?
And if these cushy state jobs
are so great, why can’t CDOT fill the 700
job openings it anticipates in the next few months? Sure, they’re getting applications, but it
isn’t an easy sell.
These are crucial jobs
affecting life and death. These are the engineers who design, build and inspect
our bridges… and the electricians, mechanics and snow plow drivers who keep
roads open in blizzards.
And if Connecticut is to get
its fair share of federal infrastructure spending it must have people and plans
in place now to grab the green. These
will be exciting jobs at an historic moment of investment in our roads and
rails, our electrical grid and water supply.
Fifty years ago I went to
Lehigh University to become a civil engineer.
I wanted to build the high speed trains of the future. Freshman calculus and chemistry persuaded me
to change my major and I ended up in broadcasting and journalism.
But if I had it all to do over
again, a job at CDOT right now would be pretty damn attractive.
No comments:
Post a Comment