House to Vote on One-Year Pay Freeze Extension This Week Using Questionable Legislative Maneuver
Monday, January 30, 2012(National Federation of Federal Employees)
This Wednesday,
the House of Representatives is expected to
vote on H.R. 3835, a bill that would extend the
two-year federal pay free by an additional
year. Introduced by Rep. Sean Duffy (R-WI) late
Friday afternoon, the bill would also freeze
the salaries of lawmakers and their
staffs.
Duffy’s bill may
be considered on such an expedited schedule due
to a legislative maneuver known as a
“suspension of the rules” whereby proposed
legislation can bypass the normal legislative
process and bring a bill straight to a vote.
Normally the bill would first be sent to
committees, giving average Americans and their
representatives in Congress an opportunity to
share their opinions on the matter before a
vote is held. Under a suspension of the rules,
however, this whole process is pushed aside.
“It never ceases
to surprise me to what lengths certain members
of Congress will go to score political points
on the backs of federal workers,” said NFFE
National President William R Dougan. “It is
immensely irresponsible to consider something
as important as a federal pay freeze, which
impacts millions of families throughout the
country, outside of the normal legislative
process.”
The impact an
extended pay freeze would have on federal
workers all throughout the nation would be
immense. Assuming a
two percent cost-of-living adjustment, the
current
pay freeze
causes nearly a $20,704 pay cut over the next
decade for a federal worker earning an annual
salary of $50,000, and a $ 47,137 pay cut over 20 years.
These kinds
of losses are staggering for middle-class
workers. Heaping
another year’s freeze on millions of
middleclass federal workers would only deepen
the financial strain.
Though
facts like these are often discussed during the
typical legislative process, the motion to
suspend the rules on H.R. 3835 will leave this
important bill to the whims of uninformed
lawmakers.
“Issues like these
are supposed to be studied in committees so
that members of Congress can learn from their
constituents how potential legislation will
impact them,” said Dougan. “By trying to
suspend the normal rules, Republicans in the
House are attempting to disenfranchise the
American people on this issue. It is wrong and
we will not stand for it. Federal employees and
indeed all Americans deserve better from their
elected representatives.”
