Port of Camas-Washougal commissioners are seeking pay raises.
Port commissioners John Spencer, Cassi Marshall and Larry Keister expressed their desire to raise the maximum amount of per-diem money that they can collect per year during their meeting on Wednesday, Aug. 16.
“My real concern here is that being a public official is a serious strain on one’s time, and anybody who is still working age really feels it,” Spencer said. “It’s a fair bit of work that is inhibiting our ability to earn a regular wage. … And it was pointed out to me that it’s not necessarily just meetings. When I was on the Washington Port Public Association (WPPA) board, I was doing a lot of desk work, and that can also be counted.”
Currently, the commissioners receive a monthly salary of $350 per month and an additional $120 per meeting (maximum of 96 meetings) per year, but only until they hit Washington state’s per-diem “cap,” which is currently set at $12,228 and “raises every few years per a Consumer Price Index calculation,” Spencer told the Post-Record.
“I think it’s important that we explain to the community that we do run out of (compensation) for a lot of meetings that we (attend), but the work continues,” said Keister, who added that he’s attended roughly 120 Port-related meetings per year for the past several years. “We still continue doing the meetings. I always joke that we should get a ‘Volunteer’ T-shirt in October because that’s when we become volunteers.”
Tacoma, Washington-based lawyer Carolyn Lake, who provides legal assistance to the Port, told the commissioners that Washington Public Port Association (WPPA) statute states that “the per diem is any day or portion thereof spent either in actual attendance at an official meeting or in the performance of other official services or duties on behalf of the district.”