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  • 2017-08-22 (xsd:date)
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  • Has the Secret Service Gone 'Broke' Paying Agents to Protect the Trump Family? (en)
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  • On 21 August 2017, several news web sites reported that the United States Secret Service had gone broke from paying wages and overtime to agents required to protect President Donald Trump and his family members. The New York Post's article carried the headline The Secret Service has gone broke protecting Trump, New York Magazine went withThe Trumps' Travels Have Broken the Secret Service Budget and The Root asserted The Secret Service is Going Broke Protecting Y'all's Baller in Chief. All of these reports cited a USA Today article from earlier in the day, which said: In response to our detailed questions about the issue, we received the following statement on behalf of Director Randolph Alles: So the Secret Service is not broke: the agency has the capacity to pay all its employees their basic salary, and to pay most of its employees whatever overtime wages are required. It also has the capacity to hire and pay additional staff. What is true is that Secret Service Director Randolph Alles predicts that by the end of 2017, some 1,100 employees will have worked at least some overtime hours above the current federal pay cap. According to an agency spokesperson, the Secret Service currently has around 6,700 employees, roughly 3,300 of whom are special agents. The current biweekly pay cap is based on compensation of $161,900 per year for special agents and uniformed division officers. This means that the combined basic salary and overtime paid to Secret Service staff on a biweekly basis cannot exceed the equivalent of $161,900 a year. (If the head of the Secret Service deems certain service to be mission critical, the overtime cap can apply to what an individual earns in a year, rather than every two weeks, according to the federal Office of Personnel Management.) There are a few different ways to address the problem: the Secret Service could hire enough employees so that the overall workload would be more widely distributed and require less overtime; Congress could pass legislation raising the overtime cap (meaning the agency could pay for more overtime hours worked, both retroactively and proactively); or Secret Service staff could work whatever overtime was required without being paid for some of it. The last option is obviously a troubling possibility and makes the current predicament of the Secret Service quite serious. The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget - a nonpartisan think tank focused on fiscal and budgetary policy - gave its assessment in a statement reading: Between 2011 and 2015, staffing levels at the Secret Service fell by 10%, from 7,024 to 6,315, according to a House Oversight Committee report (page 118). The number of special agents fell by 8%, from 3,535 to 3,257. In 2016, with these declining staff numbers, the agency covered a presidential election campaign and two major international events (Pope Francis's visit to the United States and a United Nations General Assembly meeting, both of which occurred in September 2016). In light of these challenges, Congress passed emergency legislation to retroactively increase the 2016 pay cap from $160,300 in basic and overtime pay per year to $185,100 for agents who worked on the presidential election. According to Rep. Jason Chaffetz, who was Chairperson of the House Oversight Committee at the time, the bill provided special agents an average of $20,427 each in overtime backpay. The Secret Service appears to be pursuing a similar legislative fix in 2017, while it attempts to hire more agents and more widely distribute its workload. In the statement the Secret Service sent us, Alles said this state of affairs cannot solely be attributed to the protection of President Trump and his family members, although his quotes as reproduced in the USA Today article do seem to indicate that the size of the President's family has played a role in maxing out overtime pay. However, that article did not present a breakdown of the costs involved in, or the proportion of overtime hours attributable to, protecting the President and his family. We asked the Secret Service for details on the cost of various trips made by Donald Trump and his family, the cost of protection for Melania and Barron Trump when they stayed at Trump Tower in New York City, and for confirmation of whether the number of individuals under Secret Service protection is, indeed, unprecedented (as USA Today reported that Alles had told the paper). Unfortunately, we did not receive a direct response to any of these questions. (en)
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