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US Federal Employee Wages

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Jan 9, 2008
Location
Just Across the Hudson River
I am all for a person getting paid what they are worth but this story makes me sick to my stomach considering today's economic climate and even more because, in my experience, federal employees are [fill in the blank].


The number of federal workers earning six-figure salaries has exploded during the recession, according to a USA TODAY analysis of federal salary data.

Federal employees making salaries of $100,000 or more jumped from 14% to 19% of civil servants during the recession's first 18 months and that's before overtime pay and bonuses are counted.

Federal workers are enjoying an extraordinary boom time in pay and hiring during a recession that has cost 7.3 million jobs in the private sector.

The highest-paid federal employees are doing best of all on salary increases. Defense Department civilian employees earning $150,000 or more increased from 1,868 in December 2007 to 10,100 in June 2009, the most recent figure available.

When the recession started, the Transportation Department had only one person earning a salary of $170,000 or more. Eighteen months later, 1,690 employees had salaries above $170,000.

The trend to six-figure salaries is occurring throughout the federal government, in agencies big and small, high-tech and low-tech. The primary cause: substantial pay raises and new salary rules.

"There's no way to justify this to the American people. It's ridiculous," says Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, a first-term lawmaker who is on the House's federal workforce subcommittee.

Jessica Klement, government affairs director for the Federal Managers Association, says the federal workforce is highly paid because the government employs skilled people such as scientists, physicians and lawyers. She says federal employees make 26% less than private workers for comparable jobs.

USA TODAY analyzed the Office of Personnel Management's database that tracks salaries of more than 2 million federal workers. Excluded from OPM's data: the White House, Congress, the Postal Service, intelligence agencies and uniformed military personnel.

The growth in six-figure salaries has pushed the average federal worker's pay to $71,206, compared with $40,331 in the private sector.



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I used to be an auditor within the Defense Department of the Federal government. I'd be making over $80,000 by now and would have for nearly 10 years had I stayed. I'd be doing half the work I do now for twice the pay. Yes, your average Joe auditor making upper-middle class money for just staying in the job and doing "hurry up and wait" auditing. Not only that, but meals on military bases at the Officer's Club can be half the price of meals at McDonalds. One supervisor I had paid for his second beachfront home with his leftover per-diem dollars he got but this was back in the 1970s/80s when over-seas per-diem was one lump sum per day.:what:
 

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