ROTHENBURGER: Will city councils follow MLAs’ example on freezing their pay?
PAY RAISES FOR POLITICIANS are always controversial. They have trouble denying themselves when it comes to money.
That’s why it’s nice to see that B.C.’s MLAs have rejected a pay increase for themselves in the coming year.
Kamloops-South Thompson MLA Todd Stone led the move to keep the status quo, introducing a motion in the Legislature to turn down an inflation-based pay raise in 2023.
MLAs’ pay has been set at the rate of inflation since 2000. In normal times, that means modest increases of around two to three percent but these days it’s a hefty seven or eight percent.