From a Mississippi Democratic Trust press release this afternoon:
On March 15,
the State Senate passed a bill to return Mississippi to the “spoils system,”
where political officeholders can give government jobs to friends as political
favors and to entrench themselves in power.
These taxpayer jobs are handed out based on WHO a person knows, not WHAT
he or she knows. As Democratic members
of the Senate, we oppose this proposal and want to tell you why.
Mississippi
fought battles against the spoils system thirty years ago. The State Supreme Court ruled that the state
had no justifiable system to guard against discrimination claims and salary
abuses. Following scandals under Gov.
Cliff Finch, the Legislature created the State Personnel Board to ensure that
“state service” government jobs were based on merit and objective
criteria. Among its other duties, the
Board does three things: sets basic qualifications for certain jobs, sets
consistent salary ranges to prevent favoritism, and ensures that a person
cannot be hired or fired for political reasons (such as involvement in
political campaigns).
Senate Bill No.
2380 removes all state employees from policies set by the Personnel Board. This bill is bad policy and ought to be
rejected. Mississippi and 47 other
states have basic civil service protections to keep politics out of who is
hired and fired in state government.
This bill would allow an agency head to fire an employee for no reason
and to hire cronies without any competitive process.
Today, there
are approximately 36,500 state jobs (both filled and vacant) from mental health
workers to game wardens to accountants.
About 28,500 are state service positions and 8,000 are non-state service
positions. Non-state service positions
(sometimes called “will and pleasure” jobs) are filled by appointment when new
leaders are elected or appointed. They
are not subject to most Personnel Board rules.
For example, a new Governor gets to name his staff and leaders at many
state agencies. This is appropriate so
that people elected to office can implement their agenda. State service employees, usually at the lower
end of the pay scale, provide continuity under different administrations.
In this way,
government is fundamentally different from business: we have regular elections
and need to retain qualified professional staff. We shouldn’t throw everyone out every four
years.
This practice
is basic to modern government. The
bipartisan Mississippi legislative PEER committee wrote in 2008: “All executive branch employees, except
agency directors and employees who work under the direct confidential control
of agency directors, should be subject to the authority of the State Personnel
Board.”
The Personnel
Board is composed of five members appointed by the Governor. Today, all five members of the board were
appointed by former Gov. Haley Barbour.
They set the rules. According to
PEER, the Board and former Executive Director Lynn Fitch (now State Treasurer)
have “implemented changes … to make the agency less bureaucratic and more
service-oriented.” If there the current
rules are cumbersome “red tape” then Gov. Barbour’s appointees ought to change
them.
Since 2010, the
Personnel Board has worked with agency heads to cut almost 600 positions. The average time it took to approve these
cuts? Twelve days. This is proof that current Personnel Board
policies can work efficiently to reduce the size of government when needed.
One of the primary
reasons for establishing the Personnel Board was get control of salaries.
Without oversight, we will see outrageous salaries handed out to political
friends and campaign workers. In
addition, basic qualification standards (such as academic credentials,
experience) to hold any job can be easily circumvented.
Forty-eight
states have basic civil protections for a reason. Mississippi does not need to return to the
days of political cronyism to fill the public payroll. We ought to protect and improve the Personnel
Board, not abolish it.
SIGNED:
Senator Bill
Stone – District 2
Senator Hob
Bryan – District 7
Senator Russell
Jolly – District 8
Senator Steve
Hale – District 10
Senator Robert
Jackson – District 11
Senator Derrick
Simmons – District 12
Senator Bennie
Turner – District 16
Senator Kenny
Wayne Jones – District 21
Senator David
Jordan – District 24
Senator John
Horhn – District 26
Senator Hillman
Frazier – District 27
Senator David
Blount – District 29
Senator Sampson
Jackson – District 32
Senator Albert
Butler – District 36
Senator Kelvin
Butler – District 38
Senator Deborah
Dawkins – District 48
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