Pay Sedona City Council for full-time work or not at all6 min read

Sedona City Councilman Tom Lamkin, left, Councilman Jon Thompson, third from left, Mayor Sandy Moriarty, center, Vice Mayor Scott Jablow, third from right, and Councilwoman Jessica Williamson, right, voted to give the incoming mayor and council members raises. Councilwoman Holli Ploog, second from left, and Councilwoman Kathy Kinsella second from right, voted against raises. Lamkin, Thompson and Moriarty left council six days later; Thompson and Moriarty were defeated in reelection bids while Lamkin chose not to run. Daulton Venglar/Larson Newpapers

At the last meeting of the Sedona City Council on Nov. 22, before the new council was sworn in on Monday, Nov. 28, the members of the council voted themselves a raise. To be fair, Sedona Mayor Sandy Moriarty and Councilmen Tom Lamkin and Jon Thompson only voted their succes­sors raises before departing and will not personally benefit from their votes. Councilwoman Kathy Kinsella and then-Councilwoman [now-Vice Mayor] Holli Ploog voted against the measure.

Incoming Mayor Scott Jablow and Councilwoman Jessica Williamson voted to give themselves more taxpayer dollars.

There was a straightforward question as to whether council members work enough per month to warrant an increase and what fair compensation for the work they do would be, but given the small wage and the very small increase involved, the discussion itself was almost absurd as council members weighed whether they deserve an extra $50 a month. Teens have the same debate with their parents.

With the 5-2 vote, council members now make $6,600 a year, while the mayor earns $9,600.

Elected office should either be a full-time job with a full-time salary that requires officials to make a full-time commitment, or a volunteer position in which officials serve out of a selfless love of community, not a half-real position.

Council members dismiss complaints from residents by saying that residents effectively don’t pay them salaries because the amounts are nominal.

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All towns and cities in Arizona reimburse traveling costs and expenses like any employer would, but most do not pay elected council members full-time working salaries*. Instead, they expect them to work for free for the benefit of the community. Other positions, including those on school boards, fire district governing boards and special districts, are unpaid. County supervisors’ salaries are set by state law at $63,800 per year for small counties like both of ours.

The Arizona State Legislature pays legislators $24,000 a year, but they only work from January to April, or a bit into May if the session runs long. Most have other jobs as workers, business owners, ranch or farm owners or lawyers.

In the past, a small stipend to cover Sedona City Council members’ actual hours in meetings seemed sufficient, but now these stipends have ballooned into quasi-salaries. Council has also floated the suggestion that they should be paid for the extra hours they work beyond meetings, such as when reading agenda documents, responding to emails or meeting with members of the public.

It’s very difficult to say if all council members deserve the same salary for their labor, as some certainly put in the work while others are phoning it in. We can tell from their meetings that certain council members don’t read the agenda documents, since they seem utterly surprised by some of the things they discover for the first time during meetings. Other council members clearly do their due diligence and in the midst of a meeting can refer speakers or other council members to certain pages in the agenda and scold fellow council members.

There is a more colorful way to say this — but council members need to pick a lane: A real salary or none.

Residents who are independently wealthy or retired often feel they have the time and income safety net to serve the city. Taking this into account, Sedona could go back to a fully volunteer council, only reimbursing members’ expenses.

This model saves taxpayers money and ensures that only the most dedicated residents are the ones who run for office, but it also leaves us stuck with the recently-arrived retir­eocracy that doesn’t understand families, the importance of community events, youth, why creek access matters, the concerns of the business community, the hassle of daytime traffic problems, real issues with finding rentals, the lack of workforce housing or making ends meet.

Business owners and full-time workers serve on the Cottonwood, Jerome and Camp Verde councils. Sedona’s council used to have a few of those, but they all left office by 2010.

We obviously don’t get our best and brightest to run for office. So if council is serious about paying real salaries in order to get Sedona’s best and brightest to run, they could seriously consider paying a salary equivalent to the median income: $33,284 per year. A total of $232,988 per year for seven officials is a drop in the bucket compared to the $20 million council just spent on dirt that won’t become housing for decades.

Working-class residents, small business owners, parents with young children and community activists who represent our community don’t run simply because they can’t afford to. They might if taking on the job didn’t risk landing them in a debtor’s prison.

Council could vote on the issue now and get potential candidates geared up for the 2024 election, one that could usher in a council that again represents the city’s demo­graphics, not simply those retirees with nothing better to do on weekday afternoons.

Christopher Fox Graham

Managing Editor

  • * Clarification. The original version of this editorial read: “All towns and cities in Arizona reimburse traveling costs and expenses like any employer would, but most do not pay elected council members salaries,” implying other towns and cities pay no salary whatsover, which was not the intent of this argument, rather, this distinction was supposed to be between a nominal salary like Sedona’s of a few hundred dollars a month and a full-time working salary, like those in some larger cities in Arizona.
CityPopulationCountyMayor’s salaryCouncil members’ salary
Phoenix1,608,139Maricopa$88,000$61,600
Tucson542,629Pima$41,995$24,002
Mesa504,258Maricopa$73,545$40,582
Chandler275,987Maricopa$56,758$33,237
Gilbert267,918Maricopa$43,631$21,012
Glendale248,325Maricopa$48,000$34,000
Scottsdale241,361Maricopa$51,662$31,421
Peoria190,985Maricopa$36,277$24,185
Tempe180,587Maricopa$64,627$32,314
Surprise143,148Maricopa$46,779$26,713
Yuma95,548Yuma$12,000$3,600
Goodyear95,294Maricopa$30,000$12,000
Buckeye91,502Maricopa$21,000$14,400
Avondale89,334Maricopa$19,947$9,973
Flagstaff76,831Coconino$38,500$25,500
Queen Creek59,519Maricopa/Pinal$38,882$23,072
Maricopa58,125Pinal$33,600$20,500
Lake Havasu City57,144MohaveNo responseNo response
Casa Grande53,658Pinal$16,624$9,234
Marana51,908Pima/Pinal$21,000$16,404
Oro Valley47,070Pima$12,740$10,058
Prescott Valley46,785Yavapai$12,600$8,400
Prescott45,827Yavapai$9,000$6,000
Sierra Vista45,308Cochise$12,000$9,000
Bullhead City41,348Mohave$12,000$9,000
Apache Junction38,499Maricopa / Pinal$12,000$9,600
El Mirage35,805Maricopa$26,760$14,040
San Luis35,257Yuma$19,392$9,965
Sahuarita34,134Pima$9,600$6,000
Kingman32,689Mohave$11,700$8,400
Florence26,785Pinal$11,400$7,800
Fountain Hills23,820Maricopa$7,200$4,800
Nogales19,770Santa Cruz$600$300
Douglas16,534Cochise$3,600$2,400
Payson16,351Gila$10,800$6,000
Eloy15,635Pinal$12,000$5,400
Somerton14,197Yuma$8,400$6,000
Coolidge13,218Pinal$7,200$4,800
Chino Valley13,020Yavapai$6,000$3,600
Paradise Valley12,658Maricopa$0$0
Camp Verde12,147Yavapai$350$250
Cottonwood12,029Yavapai$9,000$6,000
Show Low11,732Navajo$9,600$6,000
Safford10,129GrahamNo responseNo response
Sedona9,684Yavapai/Coconino$9,600$6,600
Winslow9,005Navajo$4,800$2,400
Wickenburg7,474Maricopa/Yavapai$4,800$2,400
Page7,440Coconino$9,600$7,200
Globe7,249Gila$6,000$3,600
Tolleson7,216Maricopa$21,000$14,400
Youngtown7,056Maricopa$16,800$10,800
Litchfield Park6,847MaricopaNo responseNo response
Snowflake6,104Navajo$4,800$2,400
Benson5,355Cochise$9,600$4,800
Guadalupe5,322Maricopa$8,400$8,400
Thatcher5,231Graham$6,600$5,400
Bisbee4,923Cochise$4,800$2,400
Cave Creek4,892MaricopaNo responseNo response
Holbrook4,858Navajo$2,400$1,200
South Tucson4,613PimaNo responseNo response
Clarkdale4,424Yavapai$4,800$2,400
Eagar4,395Apache$4,800$1,200
Dewey-Humboldt4,326YavapaiNo responseNo response
Pinetop-Lakeside4,030Navajo$12,350$6,500
Taylor3,995Navajo$4,800$2,400
Clifton3,933Greenlee$3,600$2,400
Carefree3,690Maricopa$0$0
Parker3,417La PazNo responseNo response
St. Johns3,417Apache$0$0
Willcox3,213Cochise$4,800$2,400
Williams3,202Coconino$10,800$9,600
Pima2,847Graham$3,600$1,800
Star Valley2,484Gila$8,400$6,000
Colorado City2,478MohaveNo responseNo response
Quartzsite2,413La Paz$10,800$7,500
Superior2,407Pinalnonenone
Wellton2,375Yuma$4,200$3,000
Gila Bend1,892MaricopaNo responseNo response
Kearny1,741Pinal$0$0
Springerville1,717Apache$4,800$3,000
Huachuca City1,626CochiseNo responseNo response
Miami1,541Gila$1,200$1,000
Fredonia1,323CoconinoNo responseNo response
Tombstone1,308Cochise$3,000$1,800
Mammoth1,076Pinal$0$0
Patagonia804Santa Cruz$600$1,200
Duncan694Greenlee$1,200$600
Tusayan603CoconinoNo responseNo response
Hayden512GilaNo responseNo response
Jerome464YavapaiNo responseNo response
Winkelman296Gila/PinalNo responseNo response
Christopher Fox Graham

Christopher Fox Graham is the managing editor of the Sedona Rock Rock News, The Camp Verde Journal and the Cottonwood Journal Extra. Hired by Larson Newspapers as a copy editor in 2004, he became assistant manager editor in October 2009 and managing editor in August 2013. Graham has won awards for editorials, investigative news reporting, headline writing, page design and community service from the Arizona Newspapers Association. Graham has also been a guest contributor in Editor & Publisher magazine and featured in the LA Times, New York Post and San Francisco Chronicle. He lectures on journalism and First Amendment law and is a nationally recognized performance aka slam poet. Retired U.S. Army Col. John Mills, former director of Cybersecurity Policy, Strategy, and International Affairs referred to him as "Mr. Slam Poet."

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Christopher Fox Graham
Christopher Fox Graham is the managing editor of the Sedona Rock Rock News, The Camp Verde Journal and the Cottonwood Journal Extra. Hired by Larson Newspapers as a copy editor in 2004, he became assistant manager editor in October 2009 and managing editor in August 2013. Graham has won awards for editorials, investigative news reporting, headline writing, page design and community service from the Arizona Newspapers Association. Graham has also been a guest contributor in Editor & Publisher magazine and featured in the LA Times, New York Post and San Francisco Chronicle. He lectures on journalism and First Amendment law and is a nationally recognized performance aka slam poet. Retired U.S. Army Col. John Mills, former director of Cybersecurity Policy, Strategy, and International Affairs referred to him as "Mr. Slam Poet."