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Keyword: payraise

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  • Enron Directors Vote for Pay Raise (Big 'uns, too!)

    07/14/2005 10:32:24 AM PDT · by NormsRevenge · 8 replies · 468+ views
    AP on Yahoo ^ | 7/14/05 | AP
    HOUSTON - The five-member Enron Corp. board of directors has voted for pay raises that boost salaries by as much as $1 million. In a filing with the New York bankruptcy court that oversaw the company's reorganization last year, the board said it voted to increase its compensation retroactively to the beginning of June. It raises the annual salary of Chairman John Ray III, a Wheaton, Ill., bankruptcy specialist, from $200,000 to $1.2 million. Three other board members had their pay double to $300,000, while vice chairman Robert Deutschman, a Santa Monica, Calif., investment banker, now gets $420,000 annually, up...
  • CA: Lawmaker raises not sitting well

    05/31/2005 8:40:06 AM PDT · by NormsRevenge · 11 replies · 444+ views
    Oakland Tribune ^ | 5/31/05 | David M. Drucker
    SACRAMENTO — Approval of a 12 percent pay hike that will elevate the salaries of California legislators — already the nation's highest-paid state lawmakers — to $110,880 annually has set off a new annual salary since taking office in November 2003, was disappointed with the commission's vote, believing the state's fiscal condition — though improving — does not justify a pay raise. "What have they accomplished since 1998 (the last time legislators received a raise)?" he asked. "Because that's what we do in the private sector, we will now analyze what have they accomplished: They have chased businesses out of...
  • Schwarzenegger blasts legislators' pay raise

    05/25/2005 1:40:41 PM PDT · by calcowgirl · 46 replies · 798+ views
    SACRAMENTO (AP) -- Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger stepped up his attack on the Democrat-controlled state Legislature Wednesday, chiding lawmakers for getting a pay raise despite the state's ongoing fiscal problems. "Isn't that interesting?" Schwarzenegger said in a speech to the California Chamber of Commerce. "Instead of giving the people that really need the money -- like education, health care, healthy families, the poor people, the blind people -- instead of giving them more money, the legislators decided they need the money first. So they're taking the money first." On Monday, an independent state commission granted legislators a 12 percent pay increase,...
  • Commission hikes California lawmakers' pay to $110,000 a year

    05/23/2005 7:38:34 PM PDT · by calcowgirl · 26 replies · 435+ views
    San Luis Obispo Tribune ^ | May. 23, 2005 | Tom Chorneau
    SACRAMENTO - A state commission on Monday granted lawmakers a 12 percent pay hike that boosted their annual salaries to $110,880, the highest compensation in the country for state legislators. The salary increase, which will take effect in December, is the first raise for most Assembly and Senate offices since 1998. It was immediately criticized by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, who was swept into office in the 2003 recall election when the state faced a nearly $20 billion budget deficit. "Obviously, now is not the time to give politicians in Sacramento more money," said Vince Sollitto, the governor's deputy press secretary....
  • Perry, others due big raises?

    03/11/2005 4:14:33 PM PST · by SwinneySwitch · 6 replies · 237+ views
    The Dallas Morning News ^ | March 11, 2005 | Karen Brooks
    Senate panel thinks so, but governor says 30% increase is unnecessary AUSTIN – A Senate panel quietly approved a raise of more than 30 percent for the governor and other statewide elected officials Thursday, saying that those officials don't make enough for the "size and scope" of their responsibilities. Gov. Rick Perry's response: Thanks, but no thanks. "The governor has made his feelings about this quite plain to both the Senate and the House," said spokesman Robert Black. "He has no desire for a pay increase. He certainly does not see a need for a statewide pay increase for elected...
  • CONGRESS LEANING TOWARD 3.5% RAISE FOR FEDERAL WORKERS

    11/18/2004 7:18:09 PM PST · by RWR8189 · 96 replies · 1,343+ views
    Drudge Report ^ | November 18, 2004
    CONGRESS LEANING TOWARD 3.5% RAISE FOR FEDERAL WORKERS Thu Nov 18 2004 20:06:33 ET Key members of Congress and staff worked Thursday night to wrap up a fiscal 2005 spending package for federal agencies, and Capitol Hill aides predicted that the legislation would include a provision for a 3.5 percent pay raise for federal employees. WASH POST reporting on Firday: Despite losing every pay raise vote this year, the Bush administration tried Thursday to hang tough on the proposed raise. The White House budget office released a five-page letter to House and Senate appropriators on the spending package and repeated...
  • Congress Increases Pay While Promoting Government Inefficiency

    09/24/2004 7:20:54 PM PDT · by Founding Father · 6 replies · 408+ views
    Citizens Against Government Waste ^ | September 20, 2004 | Mark Carpenter
    Congress Increases Pay While Promoting Government Inefficiency (Washington, D.C.) The Council for Citizens Against Government Waste (CCAGW) today chided the House of Representatives for passing the fiscal 2005 Transportation/Treasury Appropriations Act, H.R. 5025, that includes rule permitting a pay raise for members of Congress and would prevent regulations allowing thousands of federal jobs to be transferred to the private sector from taking effect. “It is ironic, but not surprising, that members of Congress are rewarding themselves with a pay increase in the same piece of legislation in which they are placing a greater burden on taxpayers,” CCAGW President Tom Schatz...
  • LAWMAKERS INCLUDE SELVES IN PAY RAISE

    09/15/2004 9:28:13 AM PDT · by lilylangtree · 44 replies · 732+ views
    AP | 9-15-2004 | Unknown
    WASHINGTON--With little debate, House lawmakers on Tuesday included themselves as part of a pay raise that all federal employees will receive next year. The cost-of-living raise would be the sixth straight for members of the House and Senate, boosting the salaries of lawmakers, now $158,100, by about $4,000 in the new calendar year. The civil servant COLA is part of an $89.9 billion Transportation and Treasury Department spending bill that the House is expected to pass Wednesday. The Senate has yet to take up the legislation. Like last year, the only House member to speak out against the automatic raise...
  • Another January, another Congressional pay raise

    01/06/2004 5:47:03 PM PST · by xsysmgr · 8 replies · 130+ views
    Townhall.com ^ | January 5, 2004 | Jeff Jacoby
     A happy new year?  For US senators and representatives, it certainly is: As of Jan. 1, their salary is $158,100 -- the highest ever and an increase of $3,400 over the amount they collected last year.     Congress is notorious for procrastination, and the tally of unfinished business on Capitol Hill is a long one.  But no one can accuse the legislative branch of dragging its heels when it comes to congressional pay.  Appropriations bills may gather dust, judicial nominations may languish, but members of Congress are johnny-on-the-spot when it comes to their own salaries.  The most recent raise is only...
  • Congress helps itself to another pay raise

    01/04/2004 5:17:17 AM PST · by sarcasm · 13 replies · 192+ views
    Boston Globe ^ | January 4, 2004 | Jeff Jacoby
    <p>A HAPPY NEW YEAR? For US senators and representatives, it certainly is: As of Jan. 1, their salary is $158,100 -- an increase of $3,400 over the amount they collected last year.</p> <p>On Jan. 1, 2003, they took a raise of $4,700.</p>
  • Senators give themselves pay increase

    10/24/2003 11:18:13 AM PDT · by sbw123 · 4 replies · 163+ views
    The Chicago Tribune ^ | 24 Oct 03 | Tribune Wire Service
    Senators give themselves pay increase Items compiled from Tribune news services October 24, 2003 WASHINGTON, D.C. -- For the fifth straight year, members of Congress will see a jump in their paychecks in 2004, with election-year salaries rising from the current $154,700 to about $158,000. Voting 60-34 Thursday, Senators rejected a proposal to exempt themselves from a cost-of-living increase going to all civilian federal workers and military personnel. Last month, the House, by a similar margin, also turned back an attempt to deny lawmakers an automatic increase. As in past years, the effort to deny senators their pay raise was...
  • Senate OKs raise in pay for itself(#^&$*#^&(@*$&#*($*#^&$)

    10/24/2003 3:06:28 AM PDT · by prisoner6 · 12 replies · 142+ views
    Billings Gazette ^ | 10/24/03 | NA
    Senate OKs raise in pay for itself WASHINGTON (AP) -- For the fifth straight year, members of Congress will see a jump in their paychecks in 2004, with election-year salaries rising from the current $154,700 to about $158,000. The Senate, on a 60-34 vote Thursday, rejected a proposal to exempt senators from a cost-of-living increase going to all civilian federal workers and military personnel. Last month, the House, by a similar convincing margin, also turned back an attempt to deny lawmakers an automatic share of the COLA increase. "I think that our representatives of government deserve a pay raise consistent...
  • Congress Gives Itself Yet Another Raise

    10/23/2003 11:13:00 AM PDT · by Tumbleweed_Connection · 6 replies · 163+ views
    NewsMax ^ | 1-/23/03 | Limbacher
    If you're like most Americans you don't get a raise every year and are glad to have a job and escape a cut in pay, but those swilling at the taxpayers' trough are so very special. The U.S. Senate today voted itself a pay raise for the fifth year in a row, to about $158,000 in 2004, in addition to all its usual lavish perks. The House of Representatives also kindly agreed last month to accept the 2.2 percent raise. Sen. Russell Feingold, D-Wis., who every year opposes "this automatic stealth pay raise system," said that with the economy...
  • Combat Pay Raise

    09/26/2003 5:16:13 AM PDT · by boxerblues · 20 replies · 395+ views
    Leaf-Chronicle ^ | Sept 26 ,2003
    <p>Associated Press A soldier of the 101st Airborne Division stands near a Humvee destroyed by an explosive in Mosul on Thursday. Eight soldiers were injured in the blast, but their names and units were not released Thursday.</p> <p>WASHINGTON -- Senate approval Thursday of a $368 billion Defense Department budget should bring a sigh of relief to thousands of Tennessee soldiers and their families who worried about possible pay cuts.</p>
  • Pay hikes turn lean this year

    09/14/2003 3:47:17 AM PDT · by sarcasm · 163+ views
    San Francisco Chronicle ^ | September 13, 2003 | Brian Murphy
    <p>If your pay raise this year seems to have its decimal point in the wrong place, you are not alone. Hewitt Associates reported this week that salary increases nationwide for 2003 are the smallest in the 27 years since Hewitt began its annual pay survey.</p>
  • House approves 4.1% civilian pay raise for 2004

    09/11/2003 10:24:34 AM PDT · by chance33_98 · 9 replies · 242+ views
    House approves 4.1 civilian pay raise for 2004 By Tanya N. Ballard tballard@govexec.com The House passed an appropriations bill Tuesday night that includes a 4.1 percent pay raise in 2004 for civilian and wage grade federal employees, spurning a Bush administration proposal to hold the federal, white-collar pay raise at 2 percent next year. “Unlike President Bush, the Congress understands and respects the valuable role our federal civilian employees play in providing for this country's defense,” said Rep. James Moran, D-Va., who sponsored an amendment to the 2004 Transportation-Treasury appropriations bill (H.R. 2989) along with House Minority Whip Steny...
  • Rescind the Congressional Pay Raise Act" (HR 31)

    09/08/2003 1:51:28 PM PDT · by anymouse · 12 replies · 405+ views
    Conservative Alerts ^ | Mon, 08 Sep 2003 | Congressman Jeff Miller (R-FL)
    ISSUE: Do you think Congress deserves *another* pay raise? Or should we perhaps repeal their last one, and stop automatic pay raises in the future? Congressman Jeff Miller (R-FL) has introduced a bill to cut congressional pay by 3.1%. The legislation is in response to President Bush's decision earlier this year to freeze part of the pay raise for federal employees. "How can we face our constituents when we allow ourselves to impose this pay increase?" Miller said. "Americans everywhere are doing their part to help win the war on terror. Congress must do the same and refuse the 3.1...
  • Another Pay Raise For Congress?

    09/05/2003 6:39:24 AM PDT · by areafiftyone · 39 replies · 435+ views
    CBS News ^ | 9/5/03
    The House on Thursday approved a 2.2 percent pay raise for Congress — slightly less than average wage increases in private business but enough to boost lawmakers' annual salaries to about $158,000 next year. The House members decided to allow themselves a fifth straight cost-of-living raise after rejecting them for several years during the 1990s. Their annual pay has risen from $136,700 in 1999 to about $158,000 in 2004, if the legislation clears Congress and is signed by the president. Their salary this year is $154,700. As in past years, the congressional COLA was automatically included as part of pay...
  • Lawmakers include themselves in federal pay raise

    09/04/2003 11:20:04 AM PDT · by ellery · 51 replies · 324+ views
    Associated Press via USA Today ^ | September 4, 2003 | JIM ABRAMS
    WASHINGTON (AP) — Members of Congress, along with more than 1 million other government workers, are in line for a pay raise next year under legislation moving through the House Thursday. The legislation, if approved by Congress and signed by the president, would mark the fourth straight year that lawmakers have included themselves as part of annual pay raises for federal employees. It would boost salaries for representatives and senators to about $158,000 a year from the present $154,700. Under a complicated formula, federal civilian and military employees would receive a 4.1% pay raise next year, while members of Congress...
  • As middle class disappears, rage mounts (Cynthia Alert)

    11/17/2002 7:13:34 PM PST · by where's_the_Outrage? · 20 replies · 203+ views
    The Atlanta Journal Constitution ^ | November 17, 2002 | Cynthia Tucker
    Guess what the U.S. Senate just did? In a rare outbreak of bipartisanship, lame duck senators rushed back to Washington to raise their pay. By a vote of 58-36 -- with 26 Democrats, 30 Republicans and two independents voting for the increase -- the Senate hiked annual salaries from $150,000 to $154,700 last week. (The 36 dissenters were also a bipartisan group, including Sen. Zell Miller and Sen. Max Cleland, both Georgia Democrats. Cleland, who was defeated in recent elections, will not be affected, but Miller will be.) The House already approved the measure back in the summer, hiking its...