RT-D EXCLUSIVE: VDOT bonuses, salary increases assailed, defended

RT-D EXCLUSIVE: VDOT bonuses, salary increases assailed, defended

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The 2008 payouts, disclosed in documents provided by VDOT at the request of the Senate Finance Committee, come amid plans to reduce staffing overall.

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The Virginia Department of Transportation last year paid more than $200,000 in one-time bonuses and more than $300,000 in salary increases to retain some of its top employees.

The 2008 payouts, disclosed in documents provided by VDOT at the request of the Senate Finance Committee, come amid ongoing plans in the agency to reduce overall staffing levels by 1,000 employees and to cut 450 hourly and temporary workers during the next 18 months.

Bonuses and retention payments are not unique to VDOT. For years they have played a role in how Virginia state government compensates its work force.

Last year, Virginia taxpayers funded $3.65 million for 7,458 one-time bonus payments to state employees, said Gordon Hickey, press secretary for Gov. Timothy M. Kaine. There were an additional 634 nonmonetary awards in gifts such as mugs, T-shirts, plaques and other items, valued at $28,729.

The payments ranged from modest cash rewards for employees taking on additional duties, to raises for workers acquiring additional job skills, to signing bonuses for new hires and retention bonuses to keep workers from leaving for better-paying jobs in the private sector.

"The commonwealth certainly recognizes the tough economic times we're in and continues to tighten our belts just like citizens," Hickey said. "There's real value in offering skilled employees rewards and affirmation to retain them and to reward them for improving their skills."

Critics say the decision to fork over extra cash is unwise given the agency's aggressive downsizing and the need to curtail expenditures amid the recession.

"Certainly there are some very talented employees at VDOT and all state agencies," said Sen. Ryan T. McDougle, R-Hanover. "But as a policy decision, it seems to me irresponsible to be paying out retention bonuses and out-of-cycle pay raises when we have seen a sustained climate of economic decline, and certainly unemployment levels in Virginia where they have not been in recent history.

"When we're stopping core services and laying off employees and still paying out one-time salary increases," McDougle continued, "then you have to really ask whether we are making good decisions with our resources."

At VDOT, officials said the bonuses were a good investment that safeguards public safety on the state's bridges and roads.

"I think it's essential to attract and retain the right people to safely manage our highway system," Virginia Secretary of Transportation Pierce R. Homer said. "And we delude ourselves if we think we can do this on the cheap."

In addition to the bonuses, VDOT spent $306,432 in salary increases in 2008 to retain 74 employees, part of $2.37 million in "salary adjustments" made for 684 workers.

Homer said that with the exception of salary increases for worker retention, the additional money was taken up by required pay adjustments to workers who were promoted, reassigned, given expanded duties or transferred when VDOT shuttered 28 percent of its facilities across the state.

He also noted it would be "pennywise and pound foolish" not to increase pay of some specialized, in-demand employees. He said it costs less and is safer than losing experienced workers and training replacements.

"A structural bridge engineer, a traffic operations center -- people's lives depend on these things," Homer said. "And if people want to make hay with that, they're making hay with public safety.

"You can't train somebody overnight for that. It costs thousands of dollars. We simply can't afford to lose these highly qualified people."

In recent years VDOT has been a target of conservative Republican lawmakers, who say the agency is lumbering and inefficient. One of the more vocal critics, Sen. Mark D. Obenshain, R-Harrisonburg, recently launched a Web site called "Expose VDOT Waste."

VDOT's payroll this year is $651 million, up from $425 million in 2000. Officials said 70 percent of the difference is the result of approved increases in pay and benefits since 2000.

Reta Busher, the agency's chief financial officer, said the department also has increased the number of positions it fills with professional engineers and licensed engineers. She said recruiting engineers has been a challenge.

But VDOT has not been immune to belt-tightening. As of March 1, VDOT had 8,300 employees; it will have an estimated 7,500 employees by July 2010.

Homer said the staff reductions are driven by the worsening economy and complicated by the fact that the legislature has been unable to agree on a statewide transportation package to fund maintenance and new construction projects.

As a result, the agency has been forced to cut its construction budget by about $3 billion, eliminating all urban and secondary road projects, Homer said. To accommodate reduced funding, VDOT is considering closing about half its highway rest areas and reducing ferry service by one-third.



Contact Jim Nolan at (804) 649-6061 or .

VDOT bonuses

The $3.4 billion agency paid out $208,919 in one-time bonuses to 357 people in 2008.
The agency spent $62,000 on signing bonuses to hire 14 people.
The agency spent $69,173 to retain 12 workers.
Monetary recognition awards of $60,334, an average of $186, were split among 324 workers.
Seven people split $17,412 in bonuses for changing their duties or acquiring new training.

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Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by amyjo67 on April 07, 2009 at 1:01 pm

Bonuses for top employees?  This is an outrage considering the men and women out there risking their lives and breaking their backs have been denied their cost of living raise for two years.  Governor…you need to go!

Flag Comment Posted by deetnduxx on April 06, 2009 at 11:11 pm

Is this the new definition of “shovel ready”?

Joke:  What is orange and sleeps six?
. .
. .
. Punchline: A VDOT truck.

Seriously…I’d feel better if there was any proof that heads rolled on the 288 concrete fiasco.  I’m betting those Engineers and Managers were “retained”.  Va secondary roads are third world in quality.  Tax dollars are being wasted.

Flag Comment Posted by DarnYankee on April 04, 2009 at 8:01 am

I have no problem with pay for performance or increases based on increasing duties, but those benefits should be available to all state employees. I don’t work in VDOT. Last year I got an “exceptional contributor” performance evaluation, in part because I took on and performed the duties of a colleague who left and whose position was not rehired.  I have gotten $0 compensation for either, and worse, thanks to our Governor, didn’t get a cost of living increase either. I understand the financial situation that our Commonwealth is in and I am willing to forgo the increases that I should be entitled to; but that should be the case across all of the agencies and institutions in the Commonwealth.  P.S., I don’t think that the cheesy little tool set that I got in honor of a tenure milestone (a year late) should count as a bonus, either.

Flag Comment Posted by Jer1234 on April 03, 2009 at 7:21 pm

Let us take the state employee who is not an engineer but in a technical position.  Salary $40,000.00 a year. Gets a job offer for $44,000.00. State offer to retain employee $0.00.  Good luck on your new job.  Loss to state = employee with years of training and knowledge of the state system but is gone because agency didn’t want to give him a raise.  Next employee $30,000.00 per year who goes to night school and gets a degree in the field to which he is currently working.  Shows supervisor his new degree.  Gets pat on back, a Well Done and no performaance upgrade due to lack of funds.  Employee finds new job.  BYE BYE as he goes to higher paying job.  Another loss to state and it takes 6 months or more to fill the position.  Empoyees required to take up the slack get no increase do to extra job responsibilities.  Loss to state - moral of more employees and empoyees now give agencies bad name due to increased load with no comprable increase in benefits.  Where is the greatest lose - an easily replaced engineer or a long term employee who just wanted to see a carreer ladder or increased pay for following the system as outlined in the regulations.
Rank and file state employees get the shaft as the engineers get the bonus.  No one should be indispesible and all should work under the same system of regulations.  Guess this doesn’t happen and no amount of cover up can hide this system.

Flag Comment Posted by tripower on April 03, 2009 at 5:55 pm

Hey TD, maybe it’s time you do a “hard-hitting” story on your own internal issues? I’m sure they are a lot more riveting than this non-story story.

Flag Comment Posted by M&P .45 on April 03, 2009 at 3:48 pm

In-band adjustment rules :

http://www.dhrm.virginia.gov/hrpolicy/policy/pol3_05paypracchart.pdf

http://www.dhrm.virginia.gov/compreform/crabs/crab21_hrmappendm.pdf


If you don’t at least once a year sit down with your manager and go over these two things and you are a state employee, then you fail.  You really really fail.  If your manager won’t work with you on these two things at least once every 2 or 3 years then it is time for a job change.

The two above links are how state employees deal with 0-2% annual raises.

If the RTR really wanted to stir the pot, they should compare VDOT bonuses to visa holders.  LOL.

Flag Comment Posted by mtn_hi on April 03, 2009 at 2:09 pm

IMHO is right.  Consider this;

VDOT engineer making $30 per hour + Virginia employee overhead @ 80% = $54 per hr cost to tax payer.  Same employee offered 10% more to work for XYZ Engineering Consultants @ $33 per hour + 180% Overhead + 10% Profit = $101.64 per hr cost to tax payer.

When that employee turns in his resignation, VDOT has the option to pay that employee nearly double his/her salary when they go to a consultant, or try to retain that employee with a small bonus plus the same $30/hr.

And to XYZ; transportation engineers (especially structural engineers) are in high demand right now.  There are 3 or 4 consulting engineering firms in the Richmond area that are hiring.  Many more in the beach area and NOVA.

Go to Monster.com and check out the demand for engineers in Fairfax… it’s surprising.

Flag Comment Posted by NewsGirl on April 03, 2009 at 1:03 pm

If you pay peanuts, you get monkeys. The article neglects to mention that state employees have not had raises in two years, since long before the economic meltdown. I guess it’s just another slow news day at the RTD. What to print…what to print….Oh, right! How about news from last year? No one will ever know we have a staffing shortage! Brilliant.

Flag Comment Posted by xyz on April 03, 2009 at 12:57 pm

imho, try not to misguide people. Every body knows there are thousands of employers have laid off employees (in all ctegories including Engineers) from other state DOTs and big construction firms from California, Florida etc. We are not that stupid to say civil enginners ever worked for Quimonda, Circuitcity, banks, mortgage companies etc. Also employees have many different reasons to quit the job like moving out, family, medical, etc. Do these bonuses ever help to retain anybody in those situations? So giving out bonuses is a waste of taxpayers’ hard earned money. In my opinion, whole bonus system needs to be scrapped from entire nation, be it a government or a private sector, since it is mostly abused.  If an ordinary asphalt paver or a janitor doesn’t get a retaining bonus, why someone else should? Everybody’s job is equally important.

Flag Comment Posted by irma on April 03, 2009 at 12:30 pm

What is Kaine doing to get the money back? Will he get back the bonuses from the previous administration?

Will he make sure this never happens again?

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