MADISON, Wis. — Most Wisconsin state workers and employees at the University of Wisconsin System would receive pay raises of 1 percent in each of the next two years, under a plan Gov. Scott Walker's administration released on Tuesday.
The proposal from Walker's Office of State Employment Relations is subject to approval by a legislative committee on Wednesday. The pay raises, which would be the first in five years for most workers, would take effect Sunday and show up on July 25 paychecks. The last raise for most formerly union-covered workers was four years ago.
State workers used to negotiate salary increases as part of the collective bargaining process with the governor's administration. Walker effectively did away with collective bargaining for most public workers in 2011, leaving it to his administration to set the pay plans covering wage increases and other terms of employment.
In 2011, the first year with no collective bargaining, state workers got no across-the-board pay increase, but state agencies were given more flexibility to award bonus and merit pay.
"Because we made tough, but prudent, decisions over the last two years, we are now able to invest in our priorities," Walker said in a statement. "This includes an investment in Wisconsin's state employees."
But Assembly Democratic Minority Leader Peter Barca, who is on the committee that will vote on the plan Wednesday, decried the lack of employee input on the pay raise plan.
"And state employees still have no voice as far as workplace safety, working conditions or even on their organization's effectiveness," Barca said in a statement. "Special interests continue to have a privileged seat at the table while middle-class families are not even invited."
The eight-member committee that will vote on the plan is controlled by Republicans. The two Republican co-chairs, Assembly Speaker Robin Vos and Senate President Mike Ellis, did not immediately return messages seeking comment.