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Home » New Year Will Bring Higher Pay For City Councilmembers As New Law Takes Effect

New Year Will Bring Higher Pay For City Councilmembers As New Law Takes Effect

by CLAYCORD.com
13 comments

A new law authored by state Sen. Bill Dodd, D-Napa, that will take effect on Jan. 1 will increase pay caps for city councilmembers around the state in an effort to increase diversity among local lawmakers.

Senate Bill 329, known as the Council Pay Caps bill, marks the first time that city council pay limits have changed since 1984. Inflation has gone up by more than 300% since then, according to Dodd’s office.

The law is one of 14 new laws authored by Dodd that will take effect sometime in 2024.

“No one runs for city council to get rich. But the low levels of pay make it much harder to balance careers and personal obligations with the calling to serve their community,” Dodd said in a statement when the bill was signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom this summer.

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“It’s especially hard for working people and those from diverse or disadvantaged backgrounds. By allowing councils to adjust their maximum pay to reflect inflation, my bill will remove barriers to achieving more equitable representation in local government,” Dodd said.

The previous state law ties the maximum salary allowed to be enacted by council vote to the city’s population. Most cities in California have fewer than 35,000 people, capping the pay for councilmembers in such cities at $300 per month.

Dodd said that has led to less economic diversity among those seeking to run for public office, and has also led to some elected city councilmembers having to resign before their term ended in order to keep their full-time jobs.

The new pay schedule allows local councils to vote to approve a salary of up to $950 monthly for cities with 35,000 people or less. There are six pay rates in total, depending on population size, with the highest set at $3,200 per month for city councils serving city populations of more than 250,000 people.

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The bill was supported by the NAACP, the League of California Cities, and some Bay Area city lawmakers, including Rohnert Park Mayor Samantha Rodriguez.

“This is an incredible step toward equitability,” Rodriguez said. “Many councilmembers get paid minimally, if at all. This can provide opportunity for working people who have had to balance jobs, childcare and school with public service.”

Some of the other laws authored by Dodd that will take effect in the new year include SB 3, which provides protections for customers whose water services are threatened with shutoff, SB 808, increasing tracking of sexual assault incidents at California State University campuses, and SB 387, which allows the state to lease public property to broadband providers to incentivize more internet connectivity in the state.

13 comments


Concord donut December 28, 2023 - 11:48 AM - 11:48 AM

This gives me a warm tingly feeling inside knowing they’re going to get paid and be well taken care of. I was so worried about them.
They do such a outstanding job for the city im so happy for them. Jerks!

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Captain Bebops December 28, 2023 - 11:52 AM - 11:52 AM

Bill Dodd appears the be the right hand man in destroying California. The clueless putz apparently did not know the reason there was no tax on certain foodstuffs like fruit juice. That he has done is a travesty. His fellow state senators are equally guilty in passing that. He apparently does not know how unpopular many city councils are throughout the state. Raising the pay of the mediocre will crate even more outrage. Is this not a mafia tactic?

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Old Timer December 28, 2023 - 12:38 PM - 12:38 PM

They don’t deserve it.Start listening to your public and earn their trust.

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Dorothy December 28, 2023 - 4:12 PM - 4:12 PM

They need a raise in order to go out and count trees?

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American Citizen December 28, 2023 - 5:35 PM - 5:35 PM

Many, hard-working citizens haven’t received a raise for a long time. Would be nice if we could just vote ourselves raise at work.

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Abe December 28, 2023 - 7:19 PM - 7:19 PM

The City Council doesn’t need a raise.

It needs better people.

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Bel Air Boyz December 28, 2023 - 8:04 PM - 8:04 PM

To be fair. Concord is one of the few cities I’ve seen since Covid progress. A lot of new businesses, buildings, and services. The last couple years have shown somebody cares about the city of concord.

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Hope Johnson December 28, 2023 - 10:29 PM - 10:29 PM

Maybe not. A Seeno company just bought Concord Corporation Center for $20M when it was listed at $68M.

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Concord res December 29, 2023 - 6:23 AM - 6:23 AM

@ Bel Air Boyz

You just not have lived her very long have you.. or are you just ignorant? Rising crime, homelessness, increased traffic, should I go on?

Hope Johnson December 28, 2023 - 10:31 PM - 10:31 PM

No cities with extra sales taxes should be giving themselves raises without repealing the extra sales tax. Pilferers.

v December 29, 2023 - 12:11 PM - 12:11 PM

4get a raise, put em 2 work 1st !!

domo December 29, 2023 - 4:03 PM - 4:03 PM

… sure – you vote for my pay increase, then I’ll vote for yours…. and guess who pays?

The Fearless Spectator December 29, 2023 - 6:01 PM - 6:01 PM

Perhaps this is validation that inflation is not transitory.


Comments are closed.

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