Missouri City City Council approves revised pay for non-civil service employees

Published: Thu, 06/08/23

Missouri City City Council approves revised pay for non-civil service employees


Missouri City has revised its payment plan again for select non-civil service employees.
(Joe Edwards/Community Impact)

Community Impact
By Joe Edwards 
Updated 

Missouri City has recently revised its pay plan, increasing salary figures for select non-civil service employees, including police cadets, telecommunications officers and traffic signal specialists.

City Council held a special meeting June 6 to address discrepancies requiring a revised pay plan for non-civil service employees. Despite the city's recent pay plan going into effect May 7, the department of budget and management discovered inaccurate salary figures that needed corrections.

The pay structure for non-civil service employees will now include police cadets. Despite being a trainee level in the police officer series, the position of police cadet was initially excluded from both the civil service and non-civil service pay plans, Assistant City Manager Allena Portis said.

Additionally, the minimum salary for telecommunications officers will be corrected. The initial report from Evergreen Solutions Consulting Firm contained an inaccurate minimum salary figure for this position, Portis said. The consulting firm has acknowledged the mistake and updated the data to reflect accurate pay for all telecommunications officers.

Employees with their Intermediate Telecommunications Officer Certification will now also receive an additional $30 monthly, according to agenda documents.

The salary for traffic signal specialists has also been corrected and increased. This position has recently been designated as a premium position, entitling employees to additional pay. However, the premium pay was not previously factored into the salary range. This oversight will be corrected to ensure fair compensation for traffic signal specialists, Portis said.

"Also, all duplications identified within the pay plan will be removed to streamline and simplify the system," Portis said.

The revised pay scale solutions took effect immediately on June 6 after City Council's unanimous vote of approval.
By Joe Edwards - Joe started writing for the Sugar Land-Missouri City edition in May 2023. He graduated in the summer of 2019 with a bachelor’s degree in Political Science from the University of Houston. Joe attended the University of Baltimore Law School briefly before pursuing writing full-time. Born and raised in Houston, Joe is a die-hard Houston Rockets fan. Contact Joe directly with story tips or comments on Sugar Land & Missouri City coverage: jedwards@communityimpact.com
 


2131 N Collins Ste 433-721
Arlington TX 76011
USA


Unsubscribe   |   Change Subscriber Options