Parliamentary Pay Issues: A Framework for
Discussion, by the Commission on Electoral Contributions and Expenses; Toronto,
Ontario; Canadian Legislatures: The 1981 Comparative Study, by Robert J.
Fleming and J. Thomas Mitchinson, Office of' the Administrator, Ontario
Legislative Assembly, Queen's Park.
At hand are two new studies from Ontario for
the year 1981. The Commission on Election Contributions and Expenses has
produced a modest analytical overview of the basic aspects of pay for members
of the Ontario Legislature. The focus of this "framework for
discussion" is Ontario but it does present comparable Canadian information
although the style of analysis is descriptive not comparative. The study begins
with an historical discussion of the 19th century "amateur"
politician but quickly proceeds to the role of compensation for the modern
"full-time" legislator. The analysis presented in the first two
sections of the paper is superficial. In the concluding overview of political
recruitment much is made of the contention that Canadian legislators are an
elite group "unrepresentative of the Canadian population. This is not news,
but the corollary argument that better pay and working conditions will attract
"non-elite" citizens to enter the electoral arena deserves to be
tested in light of the modern advances in both the pay and services provided to
Canadian legislators.
The third section which examines "The
Issues" of parliamentary pay is more useful. It delineates the major
questions for consideration, such as: the difficulty of comparing the pay of
legislators to other groups or professions in society; indexing schemes which
would protect legislators while seeming to give them a perverse interest in
inflation; the expense allowance and accountability; the appropriateness of
extra compensation for committee work; deductions for non attendance and
severance allowances, and other matters.
The paper by the Commission on Electoral
Contributions and Expenses suffers from a variety of methodological problems.
The 1979 data reproduced from the March 1980 edition of this journal is out of
date. The circular graphs outlining the variations in occupational status and
education are remarkably confusing. The employment case history of one cabinet
minister is interesting but not typical and hardly rates a sophisticated graph.
Interviews with retired Ontario legislators give the practioner's point of view
but are of limited utility. The study acknowledges that the perspectives
presented reflect the concerns of twenty years ago. The lack of information
concerning the number of legislators interviewed, the method of their selection
and other pertinent facts renders the use of statistics from the interviews of
dubious value. On the whole this work adds little to what is already known on
the subject of parliamentary pay. Its redeeming feature is the consolidation of
the major issues involved in developing a rationale for parliamentary
remuneration.
The other study is by the Administrator of
the Legislative Assembly of Ontario. Mr. Fleming first initiated a comparative
study of the salaries, benefits and administrative structures of provincial and
territorial legislatures in 1979; it was updated in 1980. The 1981 study is a
revised and expanded version of the original project which, for the first time,
includes administrative arrangements of the House of Commons. This is a most
welcome addition as the Commons provides a benchmark for comparison. Also, many
of the innovative procedures such as constituency offices and legislative
research services were first introduced into the Canadian scene by Parliament.
The Canadian Senate is not included in this study but should be lest some
readers jump to the erroneous conclusion that the administration of the House
of Commons and the Senate is one and the same. There are many similarities but
each House is master of its own administration.
The Fleming-Mitchinson study is more
comprehensive than the one produced by the Ontario Commission on Election
Contributions and Expenses. The framework has been expanded to include a vast
array of "nuts and bolts" information about the operation of Canadian
legislatures. There are no methodological gimmics; the editors insist that
their study is not "an academic or empirical evaluation" and they
refrain from "any attempt to make value judgements". The data on
indemnities, allowances, salaries, benefits and support services is presented in
clear tables and charts. The profile of elected members is comprehensive
although unfortunately its source, the Parliamentary Guide is not completely
reliable. The most significant new developments in this apparently ongoing
project are the description of administrative features of Canadian legislatures
and miscellaneous data which the editors describe as "House
Statistics".
The study is coherently organized into five
separate compartments, but it would help to include a table of contents. Each
section begins with an assessment of the raw data, which allows for an overview
of the facts as well as background information. It is useful to know what
administrative arrangements are in place, and how each jurisdiction evaluates
and responds to the needs of its legislators. It would be even more
enlightening to know how effective the various arrangements are; and what are
their consequences, intended and otherwise. In this respect the
"value-free" approach of the editors is restrictive. Each jurisdiction
has a complex package of arrangements. The method of presentation in this study
makes it difficult to achieve a holistic view of each package and how it
compares with the packages of other jurisdictions. For example in comparing the
expense allowances in each jurisdiction on an across the board basis the
remuneration of federal Members of Parliament looks especially generous.
However, when one considers that some provinces give generous housing
allowances and extra pay for committee work, which is not the case in Ottawa,
then the federal scale assumes a different perspective.
The 1981 Comparative Study is a most
informative document. The editors should be encouraged to continue their annual
efforts and to press further their examinations of the administrative aspects
of Canadian legislatures. There appear to be fewer factual errors than in
previous editions but too many unfortunate mistakes still exist. It is to be
hoped that others will heed the editors' plea for more comparative research
directed at legislatures. Cross national comparisons with the British House of
Commons and American State Legislatures would be of particular interest. Indeed
their conclusion that "Canadian legislators at the provincial level are
now, on the whole, more highly paid and have better facilities at their
disposal than their U. S. counterparts is a revelation that begs for further
examination.
In concluding I should like to direct some
general comments at the large number of salary studies that seem to be produced
each year. At the federal level there was the Hales report in 1979, the
McIssac-Balcer Report in 1980. The Pay Research Bureau does an annual study as
does the Canadian Region of the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association. There
are also a myriad of published and unpublished reports prepared by various
provincial assemblies or committees. Many studies do little more than rework
familiar ground.
One reason for the growing number of studies
is the need to be up-to-date. Although the general administrative arrangements
are relatively constant, salaries and benefits are revised by most governments
on an annual basis. For some, these changes are initiated in January and
revised later as the annual "indexing" figures become available; in
other jurisdictions the changes are made at the beginning or the end of the
spring legislative session. Special events such as elections, may cause further
revisions. The year 1981 was notable for the controversies surrounding the
extensive changes of pay and benefits for Members of Parliament and the Ontario
legislature. These arrangements were not completed until July 1981. July
through September are probably the most suitable months to take a snapshot of
pay arrangements as the data and analysis can be made available by December
before the next round of major changes, The Pay Research Bureau's policy of
waiting till the end of December before compiling that year's data means that
their work is out of date before it is published.
More serious than timing is the fact that
numerous researchers are tripping over each other in their efforts to
independently collect basic salary and benefit data. The telephone, as the
primary instrument of collection, is the source of several difficulties. Both
the above studies offer data which appears to have simply been transcribed
incorrectly. Other difficulties involve finding the most appropriate questions
to ask. Another problem relates to format. For example, in the Fleming study
the basic indemnity for a Saskatchewan legislator is given as $16,804;
combining the indemnity of $10,980 with the unique Saskatchewan sessional
allowance of $5,896. The Ontario Commission gives the correct indemnity figure
but ignores the sessional allowance altogether. These differences in format may
be justified by each author, unfortunately the reader is left with
contradictory information.
In an effort to improve the reliability of
salary information, I suggest that it be collected on a continuing basis by a
repository that would in turn make it available to any interested researcher.
This would require convincing some institution, for example: the Pay Research
Bureau, the Canadian Region of the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association or a
provincial Director of Administration to act as the collection agent. The
Administrative Officers of each province would be asked to Out together, on an
annual basis, the major salary and benefit changes for that year in addition to
sending notification to the cc lector of any minor changes as they occur see no
hope for making a significant cut in the number of researchers interested in
pay matters, but some centralization of information would provide researchers
with better information with less aggravation for the administrators.
John McDonough
Director, Legislative Research Service
Legislature Library
Edmonton, Alberta