Sacramento County Supervisors unanimously passed a resolution asking the county's retirement association to reconsider double-digit raises for its executives.
"The raises don't align with the county's reality," said Supervisor Roberta MacGlashan, who sponsored the resolution along with Supervisor Susan Peters.
The Sacramento County Employees' Retirement System last month approved raises of 13 to 22 percent for its six executives. The raises would mean pay of about $150,000 to $200,000 for the executives.
SCERS CEO, Richard Stensrud, did not immediately respond to a message asking for a comment on the supervisors' action. He previously has said the raises were needed to keep pay in line with other public retirement systems in California.
If SCERS does not rescind the raises, they will go to the Board of Supervisors for approval. However, County Counsel Robert Ryan has said the board does not have the legal authority to reject the raises.
MacGlashan noted that the raises come at a time when the county has laid off about 3,000 employees in recent years, others have been subject to furloughs, and when no county department heads have received raises.
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