Outgoing Hill Staffers Enjoy Final Bonuses
The Wall Street Journal reports:
Departing members of the House of Representatives awarded millions of dollars in extra pay to aides as they closed down their offices, according to lawmakers' spending records.
The 96 lawmakers paid their employees $6.7 million, or 31%, more in the fourth quarter of 2010 than they did, on average, in the first three quarters of the year.
That's about twice as much as the 16% increase awarded by lawmakers who returned to the 112th Congress, according to LegiStorm, an organization that tracks congressional salaries.
The disparity suggests retiring or defeated members used remaining funds in their official expenses budgets to boost salaries for staffers before they left Washington, cash that might otherwise have been returned to the U.S. Treasury.
Lawmakers interviewed for this article say aides work hard for smaller salaries than they could earn elsewhere, and that modest bonuses are one way of offering a reward. Some said they wanted to help employees as they look for new jobs.
Because most of the departing members were Democrats, fourth-quarter salary increases in 2010 for Democratic staffers were the largest in the decade LegiStorm has been gathering such data.
Republican staffers enjoyed a similar boost when many of their employers left office at the end of 2006.
House members are given allowances of between $1.4 million and $2 million a year to spend running offices in Washington and their district.
They have discretion over how to divide the funds for official expenditures including staff, travel, district-office rent and supplies. Payroll is typically the most expensive item in their budgets.
Any unused funds are forfeited at the end of the year. Some lawmakers make a show of officially returning a small portion to the Treasury, and others do so by default. Most try to use up as much of their budgets as possible.
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