Houston mayor gets a big pay increase

By Todd L. Disher
Frontiersman
Published on Saturday, May 16, 2009 8:39 PM AKDT

HOUSTON — The mayor got a pay raise of 375 percent. And nobody seemed to mind.

Residents at the meeting were supportive, Houston City Clerk Steve Cunningham said. All the comments were in favor of the ordinance.

“With all the controversial stuff, I’m amazed it went as well as it did,” Cunningham said.

An ordinance passed 6-1 Thursday raising the mayor’s monthly compensation from $400 to $1,500. The raise will not take effect until October when the next mayor is elected by the new council.

The $400 stipend took effect in the 1970s. With limited pu blic services provided by the city, the requirement was for the mayor to put in 100 hours a month, said Deputy Mayor Lance Wilson.

As the city has grown over the past 30 years, the expectations of the mayor are a lot higher now, Wilson said. He said many people changed their minds about the raise when they learned the mayor is the city administrator as well as the figurehead. Besides the ceremonial duties, the mayor is in charge of the city’s day to day operation.

Councilman Lee Himes agreed, saying, “The public should realize we don’t have a city manager. He takes on both roles. The money is not enough for what you put in.”

For his part, Mayor Roger Purcell said the raise is warranted. With the 45 to 50 hours the position requires each week, he is spending his own money as mayor, he said. The $1,500 should come closer to covering the cost of being mayor. It should open the position to people other than just retirees, he said.

The lone dissenting vote came from Councilwoman Virgie Thompson. Thompson is concerned the city is spending more money without bringing more in. She said all the council members serve for the city, not the money, and the mayoral position is not directly elected by the people of the city.

“If we were a first-class city, we would pay a bit more to the mayoral position, and we would also elect them,” said Thompson.

Because Houston is a second-class city, the mayor is elected from the city council by its members after the general election in October.

“If the council sits the way it’s looking like it is now, Mr. Pucell would again be mayor. I feel uncomfortable with that,” Thompson said.

The council is looking at changing the city’s designation to a first-class city, Wilson said. He said the city has most of the essential services needed, and this would allow the public to elect the mayor directly.

Purcell, who said he starts his other job at 3:30 a.m. before he puts his mayor’s hat on, said he would be happy to have someone else fill the position come October.

“If someone was really good and I thought they would be moving forward with the city,” said Purcell, “I would be happy to let someone else spend the time so I could get back to my family and my job.”

Contact Todd L. Disher at todd.disher@frontiersman.com or (907) 352-2252.

Comments

10 comment(s)

    say what wrote on May 21, 2009 7:13 PM:

    " Gosh, with the hefty pay increase maybe he can equip his friends with police lights and ticket books so they can go hoop it up and play cop, too! This is like an episode of that dumb Dukes of Hazzard show....all he needs is a white suit, a cigar and somebody to drive him around in a large white Cadillac... "

    Houston Res.......... wrote on May 20, 2009 10:20 AM:

    " obviously there are some people here who are clueless as to how houstons politics work. Purcell did this knowing he will be the next mayor... has been on his agenda before he was even on the council. Of course he will be the next mayor come october, he knows that and so does the puppet council who serves him. Unfortunately houston is not filled with many smart people just a few and they cannot combat bad politics alone! "

    Don wrote on May 20, 2009 9:01 AM:

    " $ 2.22 isn't much so there must have been other benefits with the job, besides he didn't have to except being Mayor "

    houston resident wrote on May 19, 2009 10:06 AM:

    " I agree with councilwoman Thompson. The increase in pay will be warrented however before any MAJOR increase in pay, we should be voting as the people of the city not the council of the city. Where it sits now it is a popularity vote within the coucil members. Who is scratching who's back? As for speeding tickets in Houston, as a resident, people are going way to fast all the time! Reguardless of child at play signs and so forth. Besides all the important stuff; police dept can only take a certain revenue % "

    No mind... wrote on May 18, 2009 11:24 PM:

    " Pretty good considering he refused to back a pay raise for Mr. Mayor Adams or Mr. Mayor Frosty. You go rog... you were right! They are nothing but puppets for you. "

    Cheap help wrote on May 18, 2009 8:20 PM:

    " Congratulations to the Mayor. From $4.00 per hour to $15.00 per hour. Now how about all that back pay for requiring anyone to work below minimum wage. "

    Alaska Driver wrote on May 18, 2009 12:06 PM:

    " Dave- The AST may not care about revenue however to assume that the small Houston Police force does not care about it shows a lack of knowledge about Houston politics. Yes traffic enforcement and revenue are very much related ! Traffic fines are an important part of the Houston budget. I have no ax to grind as a law abiding 58 year old with no points or accidents on my record . I've never been stopped by the Houston Police either.As for NABTE-never even heard of that. Have a good day officer and a prosperous Memorial Day!!!! "

    Dave wrote on May 18, 2009 12:11 AM:

    " Dear Alaska Driver,

    The article has nothing to do with traffic enforcement. However, thank you for warning people to obey the traffic laws.

    AST Regular, Northern Alaska Bureau of Traffic Enforcement, as well as Houston Police will be in the area. These agencies are trying to make the roads safer. They don't care about the revenue. They care about reducing the traffic related fatalities and injuries. "

    Alaska Driver wrote on May 17, 2009 11:34 AM:

    " This tells me the HOUSTON SPEED TRAP will continue in all its glory this summer as more revenue will be needed. Everybody be careful and obey the 45mph speed limit through the strip of the Parks Highway called Downtown Houston. Barney and company are on the prowl. "

    Marc wrote on May 17, 2009 4:01 AM:

    " I found an inflation calculator online. According to this calculator, $400.00 in 1975 had about the same buying power as $1,620.27 in 2009. Annual inflation over this period was about 4.2%.

    At 45 hours / week a $1500 per month salary works out to approximately $8.33 per hour salary. How many people who gripe about the increase in salary would work for $8.33 per hour? Well then if that is a hard pill to swallow, how about the approximate $2.22 per hour that the mayor makes now. "

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