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Little-Acorn
07-01-2010, 08:29 PM
This is delicious.

A Calif Supreme Court decision some years back declared that, if the state didn't have a budget in place by the start of California's fiscal year (July 1), the governor could order state workers' wages lowered to the Federal minimum wage.

They don't, and he just did.

And as a little salt in the wound: California state minimum wage is $8.00/hr. But the Court specified the FEDERAL minimum wage, which is $7.25/hr. That's what the affected workers will get, until a budget is in place. They now make LESS than any other workers in the state, except waitresses and illegal aliens.

Look on the bright side: Maybe they will all quit, and get real jobs.

Budget problem solved! :thumb:

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http://www.sacbee.com/2010/07/01/2864148/schwarzenegger-orders-minimum.html

Schwarzenegger orders minimum wage for state workers

By Jon Ortiz
jortiz@sacbee.com
Published: Thursday, Jul. 1, 2010 - 4:37 pm
Last Modified: Thursday, Jul. 1, 2010 - 5:01 pm

The Schwarzenegger administration today ordered State Controller John Chiang to reduce state worker pay for July to the federal minimum allowed by law -- $7.25 an hour for most state workers.

The instructions from the Department of Personnel Administration exclude roughly 37,000 state workers in six bargaining units that recently came to tentative labor agreements with Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger.

Some employees, such as doctors and lawyers, would get no pay because federal exempts them from any minimum wage requirement. Managers, supervisors and others who don't get paid for working more than 40 hours per week would receive $455 per week until a budget deal got done.

Schwarzenegger has invoked a 2003 state Supreme Court decision as grounds for the move. That ruling, White v. Davis, held that without a budget that appropriates money for state payroll, employee wages can be withheld to the federal minimum. That condition exists today, which is the start of the 2010-11 fiscal year and the state is without a budget. The back pay would be paid once a budget is enacted.

The administration issued similar instructions to Chiang during a budget impasse in 2008. The controller refused to comply over concerns that doing so would violate federal law. He also asserted that the state's decades-old computerized payroll system couldn't handle the complexities of changing the pay for 240,000 state workers affected by the governor's instruction.

Calls to the Controller's office seeking comment were not immediately returned.

Insein
07-01-2010, 08:38 PM
This would be a bigger issue if they wouldnt owe them backpay once the budget is done. All this does is get goverment workers pissed off at their congressmen enough to get their asses moving towards a budget. IF they didn't owe backpay, then it would be a real savings to CA. I bet this would actually save tens of millions of dollars if it last a month or two. A drop in the bucket for the billion dollar deficit of CA but shows you where to begin.