Senator
Doug Whitsett e-newsletter, District 28,
4/21/11
Public employee
compensation
Public employee compensation represents
about three fourths of the state General
Fund and Lottery budgets. Moreover, a
large percentage of state revenue
derived from fees, charges and licenses
as well as revenue from federal grants
are also spent on employee compensation.
The amount and form of employee
compensation is established largely
through the collective bargaining
process. The major bargaining issues
include salary, cost of living
increases, annual merit or step
increases, retirement benefits (PERS),
medical insurance, and paid leave. Each
of those issues has a measurable dollar
cost. However, the cost of paid leave is
not calculated as a line item cost in
determining state employee compensation
budgets. In fact, with current state
accounting methods we appear to be
unable to even accurately estimate those
costs.
We do know that public employees now
enjoy more than forty forms of paid
leave. They include vacation, sick
leave, three forms of holiday leave,
three days of personal leave, no less
than seven forms of paid leave for union
activities and even paid leave when
inclement weather forces work closure.
Several factors make the cost of paid
leave difficult to calculate. First it
depends upon the hourly compensation of
the employee. Then we must consider the
lost value from the employee not being
at their post while on paid leave.
Further we must consider the cost
incurred if someone else must be hired
to fill the post during their absence
such as a prison guard or a substitute
teacher. For instance, in a 2009
briefing paper the Oregon Department of
Corrections states that their correction
officers are only available to work at
their posts 187.52 days per year.
Therefore, it requires more than eight
officers to be employed in order to fill
a single twenty four hour seven day a
week job. It appears that none of these
cost factors are addressed in our
current budget process.
We have attempted to approximate the
direct state payroll costs of paid
employee leave. First, we estimate that
more than 125,000 employees are paid
with state funds when school districts,
education service districts, community
colleges, universities and all health
care workers are included. The average
state employee receives more than
$70,000 in annual compensation according
to the figures from the Department of
Administrative Services. Total employee
compensation could then be estimated to
be about $17.5 billion for the current
two year budget cycle.
The aggregate cost for each day of paid
leave for Oregon employees compensated
from state funds can be approximated by
dividing the total $17.5 billion cost by
the number of work days in the biennium.
That cost is about $34 million per each
day of the budget cycle. The total cost
of paid leave almost certainly exceeds a
$1.5 billion dollars in direct payroll
costs per budget cycle. That astonishing
figure does not include any costs
incurred because the employee is not at
their post. The estimate also does not
include further costs incurred to employ
another person to fill the post while
the primary employee is on paid leave.
We must update our state accounting
systems to recognize and account for all
of the direct and indirect costs of
employee paid leave. These enormous
costs are real and they will never be
accurately measured and accounted while
our budget process continues to ignore
their existence.
Please remember, if we do not stand up
for rural Oregon, no one will.
Best,
Doug
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