Salaries spotlighted as session continues

ANCHORAGE — Most state employees will give up some, but not all, pay increases in the latest round of union contracts before the Legislature for approval.

Nearly 75 percent of executive branch employees will forgo cost of living allowance, or COLA, raises under the three-year agreements negotiated with the Labor, Trades and Crafts, Alaska State Employee, Confidential Employee and Mount Edgecumbe Teachers bargaining units.

However, annual merit pay increases averaging 3.5 percent for an employee’s first five years of service and biannual “step” increases of about 3.25 percent for long-term employees remain under the proposed new contracts.

The current bunch of contracts expire June 30, the end of the current fiscal year.

The Department of Administration is also negotiating with the Alaska Public Employees Association, sometimes referred to as the supervisors union, which covers about 2,300 of the roughly 16,600 State of Alaska executive branch employees covered by collective bargaining.

Administration Commissioner Sheldon Fisher said to the House Finance Committee April 19 that he feels the agreements are fair to both sides given the state’s $4.1 billion budget deficit.

“I do feel like each of these bargaining units came to the table prepared to make concessions,” Fisher said. “We as the state gave very little in turn to get those concessions.”

The total payroll for executive branch workers is roughly $1.2 billion per year, he said.

The contracts, which generally have similar frameworks for the major components, also require employees covered by the contracts up for approval to take 15 hours of furlough time, which is equivalent to two working days per year. State workers will have the option to cash in accrued leave time to offset the furloughs, which will likely reduce the final savings.

In a March 14 presentation to the House Finance Committee, the Department of Administration calculated the net savings per year from the furloughs minus the use of leave time spread over about 7,100 employees would be $1.4 million.

Additionally, they require employees on the “economy” health insurance plan — about half of eligible state employees, according to Administration — to begin paying a portion of their premium costs. Those contributions gradually increase from 5 percent to 9 percent of premium costs over the three years of the contract.

Health insurance for the nearly 9,000 employees in the State Employees Association, also known as the general government unit, is paid through a health trust and the state’s contribution to that trust is reduced for fiscal year 2017.

The 27 Mount Edgecumbe state boarding school teachers are exempt from the furlough and insurance contribution changes.

All told, Fisher said the health care contribution changes and furloughs should save the state about $6.5 million in 2017 over the previous contracts.

If the contracts are rejected by the Legislature, the existing agreements remain in place and the projected savings would be lost, he said.

Republicans on the committee questioned why the state agreed to continue the merit and step raises, which cost upwards of $20 million per year, given the budget situation.

Fisher said the contract changes are usually incremental; the unions agreed to kill the COLAs, add furloughs and increase insurance payments in this round of contracts.

He conceded, though, that the state needs to scrutinize who receives merit-based raises, which are awarded to all employees that achieve at least “acceptable” work performance reports.

“This is an area (where) as an administration we need to do better,” Fisher said. “The reality is that as a state we’re not very effective in our performance management of our employees and it tends to be that a very, very high percentage of our employees, and I don’t know what it is but I would guess it’s over 95 percent of our employees earn their merit and step increases.”

Still, Fisher noted that the state has succeeded in “flattening the curve” of pay increases above inflation.

COLA, merit and step raises increased an average state employees’ pay by two-thirds under the contracts approved over the last 10 years, while inflation increased about 30 percent over that time. Without the COLAs — that are eliminated in the new contracts — average pay would have increased about 40 percent over the same period, according to the department.

The funding of COLAs was a topic of debate during last year’s marathon series of special budget sessions. The Legislature ultimately agreed to fund the raises but cut state department budgets by roughly the same amount, $30 million.

Departments decided to pay the raises and “ate” the difference through other budget cuts, according to Administration officials.

• Elwood Brehmer is a reporter for the Alaska Journal of Commerce. He can be reached at elwood.brehmer@alaskajournal.com.

More in News

A house on Telephone Hill stands on Dec. 22, 2025. (Mari Kanagy / Juneau Empire)
Court sets eviction date for Telephone Hill residents as demolition plans move forward

A lawsuit against the city seeks to reverse evictions and halt demolition is still pending.

Juneauites warm their hands and toast marshmallows around the fire at the “Light the Night" event on winter solstice, on Dec. 21, 2025. (Mari Kanagy / Juneau Empire)
A mile of lights marked Juneau’s darkest day

Two ski teams hosted a luminous winter solstice celebration at Mendenhall Loop.

A Capital City Fire/Rescue truck drives in the Mendenhall Valley in 2023. (Clarise Larson / Juneau Empire file photo)
Juneau man found dead following residential fire

The cause of the fire is still under investigation.

CBJ sign reads “Woodstove burn ban in effect.” (City and Borough of Juneau photo)
Update: CBJ cancels air quality emergency in Mendenhall Valley Sunday morning

The poor air quality was caused by an air inversion, trapping pollutants at lower elevations.

A dusting of snow covers the Ptarmigan chairlift at Eaglecrest Ski Area in December 2024. (Eaglecrest Ski Area photo)
Update: Waterline break forces closure at Eaglecrest Friday, Saturday

The break is the latest hurdle in a challenging opening for Juneau’s city-run ski area this season.

Patrick Sullivan stands by an acid seep on July 15,2023. Sullivan is part of a team of scientists who tested water quality in Kobuk Valley National Park’s Salmon River and its tributaries, where permafrost thaw has caused acid rock drainage. The process is releasing metals that have turned the waters a rusty color. A chapter in the 2025 Arctic Report Card described “rusting rivers” phenomenon. (Photo by Roman Dial/Alaska Pacific University)
Ecosystem shifts, glacial flooding and ‘rusting rivers’ among Alaska impacts in Arctic report

NOAA’s 2025 report comes despite Trump administration cuts to climate science research and projects

The U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., on Oct. 1, 2025. (Photo by Jennifer Shutt/States Newsroom)
Moderate US House Republicans join Dems to force vote on extension of health care subsidies

WASHINGTON — Republican leaders in the U.S. House will face a floor… Continue reading

The National Weather Service Juneau issues a high wind warning forDowntown Juneau, Southern Douglas Island and Thane due to increased confidence for Taku Winds this afternoon. (National Weather Service screenshot)
Taku winds and dangerous chills forecast for Juneau

Gusts up to 60 mph and wind chills near minus 15 expected through the weekend.

Chloe Anderson for the Juneau Empire
Fallen trees are pictured by the Mendenhall river on Aug. 15, 2025. Water levels rose by a record-breaking 16.65 feet on the morning of Aug. 13 during a glacial outburst flood.
Lake tap chosen as long-term fix for glacial outburst floods

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and Juneau leaders agreed on the plan.

Most Read