WASHINGTON – Former U.S. Rep. Chip Cravaack awarded his staff some of the largest salary increases in Congress last year as he left office.
For the first three quarters of 2012, the Minnesota Republican's staff payroll averaged a little over $197,000. In the final three months of the year, it shot up to $354,000, an 80 percent increase.
Measured another way, the average three-month salary for full-time staff in Cravaack's office rose 93 percent, from $12,269 to $23,722, in the fourth quarter of the year, with most of the increases coming in November — when he lost his re-election bid — according to an organization that tracks congressional pay. Five staff members saw their salaries at least double and Cravaack boosted the pay of another six staffers by more than 30 percent in November, congressional records show.
"[Cravaack] was quite generous," said Garrett Snedeker, an editor at LegiStorm, a nonpartisan watchdog group that says it does not accept funding from political organizations.
The average salary hike in Cravaack's office during the last quarter of 2012 was the third-highest percentage increase in Congress, Snedeker said.
Cravaack defended the pay increases, saying he wanted to help staff members who would have to find new jobs after he lost his re-election bid to Democrat Rick Nolan in November.
"At the end of the year, I maxed out everybody because I had no idea how long these guys would be out of work," Cravaack said. According to the office of the Chief Administrative Officer, congressional political aides do not qualify for unemployment benefits.
For decades, departing members of Congress have awarded large bonuses and salary increases to longtime staff, said Bill Allison, of the Washington-based Sunlight Foundation, a nonpartisan government transparency group.