• Home
  • About Alyson
  • Media
    • Photos
    • High Resolution Photos
    • In The News
  • Contact
  • Take Action
    • Volunteer
    • Calendar
    • Contribute
    • Sign Up For Updates

Government transparency and salaries

Tuesday, 31 August 2010 08:58

A stalled Assembly bill would add not just legislative staff to the salary disclosure list but also dozens of additional top-paid administrative positions within the state bureaucracy.

It's safe to say that the pay scandals in the city of Bell this summer have prompted new interest among Californians in how much money is paid to public officials. What's less clear is whether revelations about Bell's misdeeds will result in a new era of government transparency.

State legislators hastened to introduce a raft of bills to crack down on excessive pay and failure to disclose public paychecks. But the momentum came to a sudden halt when the Senate balked at an Assembly bill that would require that salaries be posted online not only for municipal officials but for state ones as well, including lawmakers and their staffs. Senate leadership agreed in theory with the need for disclosure, but said that it would be better done via internal rulemaking than by law. On Friday, the Senate hurried to post the figures for staffers on its HYPERLINK "http://bit.ly/8YJzuN" website; meanwhile, the Senate leadership supports a separate bill that would require the disclosure solely of municipal salaries.

"Our view is the Legislature doesn't tell itself what to do by statute," said a spokesman for Senate President Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg (D-Sacramento). "It does it by rule."

That might be the tradition, but senators should realize that because of the egregious offenses of Bell, which overcharged residents on property taxes, cut public services and still paid its city manager nearly $800,000, voters no longer are willing to allow elite groups of public officials to operate as they always have. Rules of the Legislature are made by the rules committees of the two houses, and can be undone more easily — and much more quietly — than a new law, which is also more enforceable.

The salaries of legislators, and of a handful of constitutional officers, have long been available at the website of the HYPERLINK "http://bit.ly/bgAH8Z" California Citizens Compensation Commission. But the stalled bill, HYPERLINK "http://leginfo.ca.gov/cgi-bin/postquery" AB 2064 by Assemblywoman Alyson Huber (D-El Dorado Hills), would add not just legislative staff to the disclosure list but also dozens of additional top-paid administrative positions within the state bureaucracy.

What's good enough for county, city and school officials should be good enough for state leaders. A voluntary rush to publish Senate salaries is nice, but not nearly as meaningful as a quick vote for good-government legislation.

Excerpted from www.latimes.com

News Articles

  • Huber passes law to save state billions, picks up Amador support
  • State reform bills signed into law
  • Huber legislation to streamline government signed by governor
  • Government transparency and salaries
  • Bills would shed light on pensions, pay
  • Assemblywoman Alyson Huber proposes bill to make officials' pay available on websites
  • Shine a light on government
  • Huber urges sunsets for state agencies

  • Huber bill to increase government transparency signed by governor

  • JLAC Questions Management Practices of Departments that Could Have Saved $1.4 Billion
  • Assemblywoman Alyson Huber hopes bills will bring more ‘sunshine’ to government
  • Not perfect but a start
  • Huber rolls up sleeves to get rid of government waste
  • Assemblywoman Alyson Huber wants to review, scale down number of state commissions
  • Huber says state board salaries still need scrutiny
  • Huber says state board salaries still need scrutiny
  • Calif. to recycle vilified waste management board
  • Huber wants to let sunshine in

Cutting Out Politics...

  • Protecting Water
  • Ending Waste & Fraud
  • Creating Jobs
  • Protecting Neighborhoods

Connect

Twitter Feed

Alyson Huber Named

"Legislator of the Year" by

CA Small Business Association

Read more...

Take Action

  • Become a Volunteer
  • Contribute
  • Find Your Polling Place

Subscribe

Enter your E-mail address: (*)

Invalid Input


Huber for Assembly 2012

Huber for Assembly 2012 ID# 1334275
5325 Elkhorn Blvd., #321
Sacramento, CA 95842

Official campaign website to elect Democratic candidate Alyson Huber for California State Assembly 2010, 10th District. Political issues. The California 10th Assembly District spans Amador County and sections of Sacramento County and San Joaquin County. District 10 includes, wholly or partially, the cities of El Dorado Hills, Gold River, La Riviera, Laguna, Lodi, North Woodbridge, Rancho Cordova, Rancho Murieta, Rosemont, South Woodbridge, Arden-Arcade, Carmichael, Elk Grove, Florin, Laguna West-Lakeside, Lincoln Village, Sacramento, Stockton and Vineyard. As listed in the California Voter Guide, Democrat Alyson Huber is running vs. Republican Jack Sieglock for election to the CA State Assembly to represent District 10 in the Democratic Caucus. Elect Alyson to office in the November 10 elections!