100.1 GO FM - We're Your Feel Good Pop Station

MLA worried excluded workers will suffer from salary freeze

Kam Lake MLA Kieron Testart has criticized the territorial government for freezing the salaries of excluded employees.

Last Friday, territorial finance minister Robert C McLeod announced that the salaries of some of the government’s top earners would be frozen for two years, beginning in 2016-17.

The decision affects deputy ministers, senior managers and excluded workers as the GNWT tries to reduce expenditures.

“We are no longer in a position where we can keep expenditures at their current rate and hope to keep expenditure growth in line with revenue growth to maintain fiscal sustainability,” McLeod said at the time of the announcement.

“Revenues are declining and we need to reduce the level of expenditures as well as restrain their growth.”

Robert C McLeod
Finance minister Robert C McLeod.

On Tuesday, Testart expressed concern about the effect that decision might have on hard-working northerners in non-managerial positions.

“I started my career in the public service as an excluded employee working as an administrative assistant,” he told MLAs.

“I can confirm to this House that I was not in a position that earned a high salary and given the high cost of living and working in the NWT, my family often struggled to save for our future.

“I fully support a pay freeze for myself as an MLA and for public servants in management positions.

“However, I find it difficult to support a pay freeze that may unduly burden public servants at lesser positions who have less in their pockets as costs for everyday expenses continue to increase.”

Responding to Testart, McLeod said a total of 844 people will be affected by Friday’s decision. But that doesn’t mean they won’t have an opportunity to earn raises within their pay grades over the next two years.

“What we’re doing is we’re freezing the grades so if there’s still an opportunity for them to progress through the grades that they’re in right now, they still have that opportunity,” said McLeod.

That means affected workers will still be eligible for raises of up to 2.5% a year so long as they remain in their current pay grade. By freezing salaries for two years, McLeod says the government will save a total of $3.8 million.

“We have to understand that we’re facing some challenges fiscally,” he added.

“With some of the asks from this legislative assembly going forward, we’re going to have to manage our finances a lot closer.”

Mike Gibbins
Mike Gibbins
Hello and thank you for listening to 100.1 Moose FM! To contact me, you can email me, find me on Twitter or call (867) 920-4663.

Continue Reading

You may also like



cjcd Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

Water testing at two schools in Hay River show elevated levels of lead

Water testing at two more schools in the territory indicated elevated levels of lead for some of the schools' fixtures. While water testing at the Diamond Jenness Trades Centre in Hay River showed lead levels below Health Canada’s guidelines, testing at two other schools showed elevated levels. Water testing at Princess Alexandra School and Diamond Jenness Secondary School showed that water samples for some fixtures tested above the guidelines.

Bronwyn Watters honoured and remembered in Yellowknife

Yesterday, family and friends gathered to remember Bronwyn Watters, a local Yellowknifer, who touched the lives of many people. Watters was honoured with a commemorative library at AVENS in the city of Yellowknife. In over 30 years working in public service roles, Watters took on may leadership roles including as deputy minister of the Department of Justice, but was also remembered by her family and friends for her work as a volunteer, a poet, photographer and an avid reader of books

Police warn that phone landlines may be down in Tuktoyaktuk

A communications outage is effecting landline telephone calls in Tuktoyaktuk, said RCMP in an announcement issued this afternoon. Police are advising anyone in the area in need of police services and unable to use their phone, to go directly to the police station The communications company is working on the issue but it is unclear when telephone landline access will be restored.

Suspect facing charges after alleged knife assault on security guard in YK

A 30-year-old suspect is facing charges after an alleged knife assault involving a security guard yesterday in the city of Yellowknife. “On December 18th at approximately 12:03 p.m. Yellowknife RCMP received a report that a security guard had been attacked by a person with a knife at an apartment building in the downtown area of Yellowknife. The security guard was able to escape uninjured,” said police.

The Christmas Bird Count anticipates rare birds like the Northern hawk owl

On Saturday Ecology North is hosting the annual Christmas Bird Count, a community event led by local bird expert Reid Hildebrandt. Last year, the count recorded nearly 3,000 individual birds during the daytime, including 14 different bird species and two rare species in the Yellowknife area alone. The count has been going on for nearly 40 years, explains Dawn Tremblay, who is the executive director of Ecology North. “The results from last year showed 2783 individual birds,” says Tremblay.