State Rep. Justin Humphrey wrote a bill to help the employees who missed the raise but his bill failed before it reached the House and Senate floors.
Quinton Chandler / StateImpact Oklahoma
State Rep. Justin Humphrey wrote a bill to help the employees who missed the raise but his bill failed before it reached the House and Senate floors.
Quinton Chandler / StateImpact Oklahoma
Low pay is at the center of Oklahomaās struggle to keep its prison employees.
Six-year veteran corrections officer Paul Mullaney quit over pay and working conditions just months after lawmakers approved a $2.00 raise for prison employees. He worked in the mental health unit of Joseph Harp Correctional Center in Lexington.
The extra money wasnāt enough to keep him.
āIt was just crazy. I mean it was just dangerous and … I (had) enough,ā
Corrections officers are often the people Department of Corrections leadership and employee advocates point to when they argue for pay raises.
Agency leaders have long said low pay is a key obstacle in recruiting and keeping the officers who maintain order in Oklahomaās overpopulated prisons.
State prison employees are among the lowest paid in the nation. Department of Corrections data shows in 2018, a new correctional officer started with less than $13.00 per hour.
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the national median wage for corrections officers in the same period was about $21.00 per hour. Lawmakers took note of the disparity and increased pay.
First, they raised wages for state employees in 2018. Then, in 2019, they increased pay for corrections officers by $2.00 dollars per hour bringing starting pay to $15.74 per hour.
But, Mullaney didnāt think that was enough money to ask an employee to work 12-hour days each week in hazardous conditions.
āThose wages, thatās junk,ā Mullaney said. āYes, your health benefits are great and everything, and thatās fantastic. But, you also have to live too and it takes money to live.ā
But, other corrections workers who stayed at their jobs got an unpleasant surprise when the second raise started hitting peopleās paychecks. Legislators made a mistake. Hundreds of people were left out of the increase.
State Rep. Justin Humphrey was one of the authors of a bill that paved the way for the 2019 raise for corrections officers. He wanted the additional money to go to people who work around prisoners regularly.
But, the Department of Corrections has a complicated way of labeling its employees.
āAnd what happened when those bills got (taken) over ā¦ that language got removed,ā Humphrey said.
If you read a list of the agencyās job titles, you canāt always tell the people who work around prisoners from people who donāt.
In an effort to make the legislation clearer, the state Senate added language listing the specific jobs people had to work to get the raise. But that left at least 432 people out of the full raise.
Humphrey said he found even more people working around prisoners who didnāt get additional pay. He found farm employees and people working in the stateās correctional industries ā people even his initial bill didnāt include.
Department of Corrections Director Scott Crow said in a board meeting last year that he wanted to fix the problem.
But, Crow said his attorneys warned him that the agency could invite a discrimination lawsuit if it gave raises to the employees who missed out. Fearing litigation, the agency and its board asked the Legislature to fix the problem this session.
Thatās what Humphrey wants to do. He filed a bill that would have corrected the pay inequity, but a House committee chose not to advance the legislation.
A bill in the Senate could accomplish the same thing if both chambers approve it and the governor adds his signature, but itās unclear if it will succeed.
Meanwhile, the officers who didnāt get the raise will continue to work alongside those who did.
Former legislator Bobby Cleveland says itās a āslap in the faceā for those employees.
ā(Itās) like you donāt count. Youāre not important,ā Cleveland said.
Cleveland is the director of Oklahoma Corrections Professionals ā a prison employee union. He says after Gov. Kevin Stitt approved the 2019 raise, the Department of Corrections should have adjusted the way it identifies staff, so no one would be left out of the pay increase.
āWeāre not trying to do anything other than to get them what they deserve,ā Cleveland said.
Even though hundreds of current employees were left out of the raise, the additional money could be helping the agency recruit new corrections officers.
According to Director Crow, the agency saw an average increase of 63 people applying to become corrections officers each month after the 2019 raise.
Paul Mullaney feels for the officers he left behind when he moved to Washington State, but he says heās happier in the certified nursing assistant job he found there. It pays more, and he says itās less stressful.
āThe cost of living is a little higher, but I donāt even care,ā Mullaney said.