Posts from "2009-01"

LegiStorm completes collection of 2008 financial disclosures

Posted by LegiStorm on Wednesday, January 28, 2009
LegiStorm has completed uploading all 2008 personal financial disclosures for members of Congress and their staffers, including all amendments, new employee reports and termination filings.

We have reviewed all the personal financial disclosures filed with the House and the Senate and made sure our 2008 holdings are complete. We've gathered all available disclosures for the staffers in our database and made them available online. A handful of other 2008 disclosures may come in from late filers and we will periodically check to make sure we have them all.

Not all staffers are required to file disclosures. Only the top-earning staffers or those holding the most important positions in each office are required to file. For more information on financial disclosures, see our About Financial Disclosures page.

LegiStorm is the only site on the web making congressional staffer disclosures available. We are committed to increasing legislative transparency, and feel it is important the financial dealings of the top staffers - who are often instrumental in writing and passing legislation - are open and freely available.

LegiStorm releases 2008 Senate salary data

Posted by LegiStorm on Friday, January 16, 2009
LegiStorm has now updated its Senate staff salaries, releasing data for the second and third quarter of 2008, ending Sept. 30.

The release comes six weeks after the Secretary of the Senate published a set of books detailing all salaries and all expenditures of the Senate for the six-month period running from April 1 to Sept. 30. Since that time, LegiStorm has been keypunching the data, as well as proofreading for errors and matching the data to our existing salary and other records.

We released the House staff salaries on Tuesday. The next Senate salary data release will occur in six months, the next House one in three months.

LegiStorm updates House salary data

Posted by LegiStorm on Tuesday, January 13, 2009
LegiStorm has updated its House staff salaries, releasing data for the third quarter of 2008, ending Sept. 30.

The release comes six weeks after the Clerk of the House released a three-volume set of books containing salaries and all expenditures of the House of Representatives. Since that time, LegiStorm has been keypunching the data, as well as  proofreading for errors and matching the data to our existing salary records.

We are nearing completion of editing the Senate salary data as well. The Senate releases its expenditure records every six months, so the existing Senate salary data on our site is naturally getting a bit old, with March 31, 2008 being the last closing date. But this Thursday, we hope to bring the data current to Sept. 30.

Congressional members receive a 2009 salary increase

Posted by LegiStorm on Thursday, January 08, 2009
Members of Congress will receive an annual salary increase of $4,700 for 2009 as a result of an automatic cost of living allowance that took effect on January 1, raising the default annual member salary to $174,000. A handful of the House and Senate's top leaders make even more than that.

Though congressional pay increases are rarely popular, the 2.8% increase in 2009 has come under fire from some critics who note that many constituents across the country face wage freezes, job losses and general financial despair as the year begins.The critics include such groups as Citizens Against Government Waste and the National Taxpayers Union.

Since the Ethics Reform Act of 1989, member salary increases are made based on a cost-of-living allowance that is granted automatically at the beginning of each calendar year. This practice means that Congress would have to actively take up the issue on the floor to vote to decline the pay increase, leaving a voting record come re-election time.  

We have long showed users what members of Congress earn on member salary pages such as this one for Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Calif.). Today we have also added a new page about the recent history of member salary increases and about member salaries here.

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LegiStorm updates members of Congress and adds financial disclosures

Posted by LegiStorm on Monday, January 05, 2009
The members of the 111th Congress will be officially sworn in Tuesday and LegiStorm has already updated its pages to reflect the new congressional makeup.

We have added all the new freshmen senators and representatives, and have updated the status of those leaving the legislative bodies. We've also added the financial disclosures for the new members filed as candidates, giving their constituents an early look at the new legislators' financial dealings.

We don't yet have biographical information or photos of most of the new members. We'll update those as soon as the official bios and pics are released. We'll also continue updating our lists of members as open seats are filled.

Although embattled Illinois Gov. Rob Blagojevich (D) appointed Roland Burris (D) to fill the Senate seat left vacant by President-elect Barack Obama, we have not yet added Burris to our list as Senate leaders have vowed to block him from being seated. In another race, Democrat Al Franken was declared the winner for Minnesota's open Senate seat today, but we are waiting to add him to our rolls until all challenges have finished and he is ready to be sworn in.

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