PAY DEBATE The SLO City Council is exploring whether to increase compensation for elected officials. Credit: File Photo

San Luis Obispo City Council members voted unanimously on Aug. 20 to appoint seven residents to a committee that will deliberate potential increases to elected city leaders’ compensation packages.

SLO council members currently earn $14,688 per year plus insurance benefits and the mayor makes $20,700 per year plus benefits. The SLO City Council last increased its compensation in 2018 with a 15 percent raise to the mayor and 2 percent raise to council members. In 2014, the city approved 20 and 25 percent raises for the council and mayor, respectively.

PAY DEBATE The SLO City Council is exploring whether to increase compensation for elected officials. Credit: File Photo

Mayor Heidi Harmon told New Times on Aug. 21 that she views the issue of council compensation as one about achieving equity in city leadership. Harmon said it’s challenging for working to middle class residents to even consider a run for local office given its time commitment and lack of pay.

“The role of mayor, in particular, and city council have really evolved over the years and we’ve taken on a lot more responsibility,” Harmon said. “Living in the sixth most expensive place to live in the U.S., you have a real challenge in terms of being able to do this job and do it well. To me the biggest and most important aspect is that lack of compensation in turn directly impacts who can run and be in these roles, which directly impacts policy.”

In the at-times contentious debate over compensation, Harmon hasn’t shied away from directly taking on constituents about the issue. In a July email, resident Dia Hurd asked Harmon to “resign” or “quit complaining” about her salary.

“The only way you get more salary is it HIT THE CITIZENS UP YET AGAIN FOR MORE CITY TAXES,” Hurd wrote. “If you can’t afford to serve on the council, give us a chance. We don’t whine like you all do!”

In response, Harmon told Hurd that her email was “off-base, ageist, and classist,” and that her “lens is based in white supremacy.”

“[I hope] we can have constructive community conversation about attitudes such as yours and how detrimental they are to the democratic process,” Harmon wrote.

The 2020 Council Compensation Committee will meet over the next nine months and make final recommendations to the City Council by May 2020. Δ

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3 Comments

  1. Hi Kevin. A group of 12 individuals (1 former elected official, 2 personnel board members, and 9 citizens at large) were nominated by City Council members for this committee. On Aug. 20, the City Council voted in 7 of them (1 former elected, 1 personnel, and 5 at large).

    Final committee: Dan Rivoire, Cal Stevens, Audrey Bigelow, Kim Bisheff, Garrett Otto, Jenn Stubbs, and Ron Yukelson.

  2. Many of us think Mayor Harmon is the one who should be cleaning her so-called lens. Heidi Harmon told Dia Hurd that her email was “off-base, ageist, and classist,” and that her “lens is based in white supremacy.

    If anyone could be ageist and racist, it would sooner be Mayor Harmon than Dia Hurd. Why? Because Dia Hurd is 67 years old, 18 years older than the Mayor. And how could Dia, an Asian-American and a practicing Buddhist, qualify as a white supremacist? This mayor, not unlike our deplorable POTUS, is throwing out scurrilous, inappropriate ad hominems.

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