Are N.W.T. MLA salaries relevant in union talks? Depends who you ask - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 19, 2024, 11:07 AM | Calgary | -4.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
NorthAnalysis

Are N.W.T. MLA salaries relevant in union talks? Depends who you ask

The impending expiration of a wage freeze MLAs imposed on themselves two years ago, and the lack of any move to extend it, has fired up workers in collective bargaining negotiations with the government.

N.W.T. MLAs are among highest paid in Canada, pay includes non-accountable, non-taxable allowance

A two-year wage freeze by N.W.T. MLAs is set to expire in April of 2018. (Mitch Wiles/CBC)

The impending expiration of a wage freezeMLAsimposed on themselves two years ago, and the lack of any move to extend it, has firedup workers incollective bargaining negotiations with the government.

The looming expiration of the freeze was the topic of a closed-door conversation of the group ofMLAswho overseeoperation of the legislative assembly. In a press release issued the day after CBC reported on that discussion, the chair of the group,Speaker JacksonLafferty,said thatMLAsgave no instructions and took no decisions on the wage freeze.

IfMLAsgive no instructions or take no decisions on the freeze, it will expire and automatic consumer price indexincreases will resume startingApril 1, 2018.

Northwest Territories MLAs are not the only ones in Canada currently under a wage freeze. Members of the Ontario provincial parliament have frozen their wages since 2009, andNew Brunswick MLAs haven't had an increase since 2008.

In many provinces, wage increases are not automatic, but tied to the financialperformance of the government or provincial economy.

'It's dominating the meetings'

In an interview with CBC, the clerk of the legislature saidCBC's story had incorrectly linked the discussion of lifting the freeze to current collective bargaining negotiations.

"It's erroneous to create a link between the two," said Tim Mercer. "The decision that theMLAsmade with respect to their own salaries has no relation whatsoever to collective bargaining."

However, according to Todd Parsons, the president of the Union of Northern Workers,thousands of government workers being asked to take no wage increases for two years and one per cent in the third and fourth years disagree.

Parsons said the pending lift of the salary freeze was the number one topic of conversation at meetings inInuvikthis week with Northwest Territories Power Corporation workers, who he says are considering a strike vote.

Todd Parsons, president of the Union of Northern Workers, says that talk of the ending of the MLAs' wage freeze is 'dominating our meetings.' (CBC)
"They're raising the issue that all of the members of the legislative assembly enjoy wage protections that are not being offered to workers," said Parsons. "It's in the forefront of their thoughts. It's dominating our meetings."

Parsons noted that neither the government nor the workers want to strike, "but what this has done has riled up the members.

"They're going to stand up and they're going to fight," he said."This government is making it easier to get a high strike mandate out of the group that we're polling, which is the Northwest Territories Power Corporation."

Parsons speculated that theMLAsinstituted the wage freeze thinking that by the time it expired the government would have reached collective agreements with the three groups of workers they are negotiating with GNWTemployees, Northwest Territories Power Corporation Employees, and Hay River Health and Social Services employees. None of the three are close to being settled.

AllMLAscollect more than base wage

The wage freeze is expiring at a time when a regular review ofMLAswages and allowances is about to begin.

The last two reviews, conducted in 2010 and 2014, found thatMLAs'base wage, which now stands at $103,851 annually, is one of the highest in the country. Butevery MLA makes considerably more than that.

AllMLAsget paid annual northern allowances,ranging from $3,450 forMLAsliving in Yellowknife to $17,979 for Frederick Blake, who lives inTsiigehtchic. NunakputMLA HerbNakimayakbriefly collected the highest northern allowance ofMLAs$25,539 but moved fromPaulatukto Yellowknife after being elected.

MLAsliving in northern and remote areas of B.C., Ontario and Alberta get no northern allowances.

In addition to the extra pay the premier ($78,896), cabinet ministers ($55,583), and the speaker ($45,203) collect, all regularMLAscollect extra pay.

For example, with allowances and his pay as deputy speaker, Hay River North MLAR.J. Simpson makes just over $131,000 annually. Blake makes slightly more than $141,000. YellowknifeMLAsJulie Green and Kevin O'Reillyeach get paid $118,025.

Non-taxable, non-accountable allowance

Included in those totals is a controversial non-taxable, non-accountable expense allowance allMLAscollect in theirbi-weeklypay.

The allowance amounts to $7,484 annually for YellowknifeMLAsand $14,968 for all otherMLAs. With the exception of this year and last the years covered under the wage freeze it also automatically increases with the cost of living. The allowance is not taxed as income and, becauseMLAsare not required to account for it, they can spend it on whatever they want.

Northwest Territories legislators have ignored repeated calls inindependent reviews to do away with the allowance. The 2010review of members' indemnities said that "it is easy for an MLA to pocket this allowance without using it for its intended purpose and that begs the question of whether this should be regarded as part of an MLA's indemnity and taxed as income."

In the 2014 review, the allowance was referred to as "neither accountable nor transparent and is often perceived as a misuse of public funds."

MLAsoriginally gave themselves the allowance to cover incidental expenses such as buying coffee and meals for constituents, buying raffle tickets for community fundraisers, and donating to community organizations. It comes in addition to constituency work allowances ranging from about $80,000 annually for YellowknifeMLAsto $95,000 for theNunakputriding.

The only other jurisdictions in Canada with non-taxable, non-accountable expense allowances are Yukon and Quebec.