Katie Couric Fails Miserably Trying to Bait John Fetterman Into Saying This About...
Federal Appeals Court Grants a Critical Victory Against the Gender Nazis
Guess Who Else the FBI Targeted in Its Mass Surveillance Operation Under Biden
They Wanted Children to Watch Sexually Inappropriate Drag Shows – Here's What the...
Trump Is Suing the Crap Out of This News Outlet
American Airlines Flight Carrying Four Congressmen Diverted Thanks to Unruly Passenger
Elon Musk Throws His Full Support Behind Byron Donalds in Florida Governor's Race
Trans Activism Puts the 'Affirmation' of Men Ahead of the Needs, Safety of...
State Department Will Classify Antifa As a Foreign Domestic Terrorist Organization
George Soros and the Protection of Evil
Climate Alarmists Find a New Way We're All Gonna Die
Heres What the Schumer Shutdown Cost the American People
Senator Fetterman Hospitalized in Pittsburgh After Fall, Suffered Minor Injuries
DNC Staffers in Uproar Over Return-to-Office Order With 60-Day Notice
Marco Rubio Torches EU Officials Who Claim That U.S. Narco-Terrorist Strikes Violate Inter...
Tipsheet

Newsom Blocks Firefighter Pay Raise After Record Wildfire

AP Photo/Jae C. Hong

California Governor Gavin Newsom on Friday vetoed a bipartisan bill, designed to give raises to California state firefighters, only nine months after the state's most expensive wildfire raged through Los Angeles.

Advertisement

The raise would have bumped their salaries by between 11 and 29 percent. 

Current base pay for state firefighters is $54,122 per year, while Los Angeles city firefighters make $85,315.

Governor Newsom argued that the bill would create “significant cost pressures for the state” and undermine collective bargaining power for salary increases. “Establishing a statutory floor for employees of a single department undermines this process, to the detriment of both the state and other bargaining units,” Newsom wrote.  

Union members condemned the governor's decision.

“Cal Fire is an all-risk fire department, just like a San Francisco Fire Department or Santa Rosa or San Jose Fire Department,” Tim Edwards, the president of the Local 2881 union representing CAL FIRE workers, said. “We don’t have the staffing like they do. We don’t have the workweek like they do, and we definitely don’t have to pay like they do, but we do the exact same job at the exact same training, and we’re expected to do the exact same, the exact same services.”

Advertisement

Edwards also noted the veto would not help to remedy CAL FIRE's staff shortage. State firefighters are also expected to work more than local firefighters, and yet local departments, on average, have around a 17 percent lead in total compensation, and nearly 90 percent greater staffing.

“It’s highly disappointing and frustrating especially when he vetoes the bill the day before we put six members on the memorial wall honoring fallen firefighters in the state of California,” he continued.

The bill would have required CAL FIRE salaries to be set within 15 percent of the average pay at 20 local fire departments.

It would have cost the state between $373 million and $609 million in the first year, according to a State Assembly analysis.

Editor’s Note: The Schumer Shutdown is here. Rather than put the American people first, Chuck Schumer and the radical Democrats forced a government shutdown for healthcare for illegals. They own this.

Help us continue to report the truth about the Schumer Shutdown. Use promo code POTUS47 to get 74% off your VIP membership.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement