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Connecticut mental health employees tripled their pay with overtime earnings, according to audit

Some employees with Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services worked up to 137 consecutive days, bolstering their annual pay by three times their base salary, according to a report by the Auditors of Public Accounts. 

“We judgmentally selected 18 employees from units paying the highest amounts of overtime for review, noting excessive work days for 17 of the employees, who worked between 12 and 137 consecutive days,” the auditors wrote. “As a result of the consecutive work days, we performed an analysis of annual earnings for the 18 employees, noting that 13 earned 2 to 3 times their base salaries in overtime during at least one of the two fiscal years reviewed.”

The audit, which covered the years 2015 and 2016, noted that Connecticut Valley Hospital’s overtime payments made up 65 to 67 percent of the total $101 million in overtime payments made by the Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services during those years.

The report also found that some housekeeping and maintenance employees would take leave time during regularly scheduled work hours “while subsequently working significant overtime on nights and weekends.” 

According to the report, two housekeeping and maintenance employees had only one unpaid day in the first year reviewed and three unpaid days in the second year of review.

On-call payments for physicians and psychiatrists also added up to more than $100,000 per year for 9 out of 10 employees reviewed, according to the audit, with employees working multiple shifts in excess of 20 hours. 

DMHAS employees can be mandated by management to stay for overtime.

According to the audit, DMHAS did not have proper documentation for a majority of the overtime hours worked. “The department is unable to adequately monitor overtime costs at each unit,” the auditors wrote. “Given the significant overtime costs at CVH, the data would appear critical to making informed business decision regarding staffing levels and use of overtime.”

Overtime is factored into state employee pensions at different rates depending on what retirement tier and employee has been hired into. 

For instance, according to the Comptroller’s Open Payroll website, one supervising nurse with DMHAS had a base salary of $97,273 in 2019 and earned $191,428 in overtime and another $28,229 in “other pay” for total annual earnings of $321,443.

The same nurse had earned over $299,000 each year from 2016 to 2019. 

According to the date of hire, the supervising nurse would be in the Tier II retirement plan, which averages out an employee’s three highest earning years, including overtime, to determine his or her pension payment.

A head nurse with DMHAS is listed as earning $165,614 in overtime payments over her salary of $72,130, for a total annual payment in 2019 of $274,992.

The department responded, noting that since the audited years, it has made significant reductions in overtime payments, reducing overtime by $10 million since the 2015 – 2016 audit period. DMHAS also wrote that they have created a “multidisciplinary work group to track overtime.” 

According to the third quarter overtime report by the Office of Fiscal Analysis, DMHAS so far has paid $44 million in overtime during fiscal year 2020, exceeding last year’s third quarter payments by $3.8 million.

Marc E. Fitch

Marc E. Fitch is the author of several books and novels including Shmexperts: How Power Politics and Ideology are Disguised as Science and Paranormal Nation: Why America Needs Ghosts, UFOs and Bigfoot. Marc was a 2014 Robert Novak Journalism Fellow and his work has appeared in The Federalist, American Thinker, The Skeptical Inquirer, World Net Daily and Real Clear Policy. Marc has a Master of Fine Arts degree from Western Connecticut State University. Marc can be reached at Marc@YankeeInstitute.org

6 Comments

  1. Kathleen
    May 6, 2020 @ 3:50 pm

    Forced overtime is not a choice. Direct order mandates rob employees of their ti.e with family. Report the whole story

    Reply

    • stop racial disparity
      September 15, 2020 @ 12:16 pm

      FAlse mandates are a choice.

      Reply

  2. Thad Stewart
    May 10, 2020 @ 11:02 am

    Tripling of ones base salary, does not sound like forced overtime, but someone gaming the system. Please.

    Reply

  3. Ivan
    May 10, 2020 @ 1:15 pm

    So what, you want people to fill these positions and do the work for free? Would you?? Most of these places have mandated staffing levels, hence the OT whether someone is mandated to fill it or someone voluntarily accepts it. Those people with the high earnings would be the last in line to voluntarily accept, meaning all those below them in earnings refused the OT. When the volunteers for OT run out that’s when mandates begin, and spouses and kids feel the effects of that as well.

    Reply

    • Dorothy Washington
      September 15, 2020 @ 2:33 pm

      Nonsense, ridiculous, 9 times out of 10 the employees are sleeping on the job, taking 2 hour lunch breaks, shopping online, bullying, harassment, sabotage of the workers who want change, and non-skilled nursing care. Especially at Greater Bridgeport Community Mental Health Center. If only the tax payers knew the truth! And the CEO is incompetent and know everything that illegally goes on and does nothing about it. Pure absence of ethics, and morals!

      Reply

  4. STOPWASTING TAXPAYER DOLLARS
    September 15, 2020 @ 12:15 pm

    The CEO and the commissioner know about this stealing. The problem is taxpayers don’t realize this is costing taxpayers. They sleep on nights and earn money all behind 1199 rules. For example Southwest CT Mental Health Center on 1635 Central Avenue only houses 62 patients which equates to about 21 patients on 3 unites. The unit is staffed with several RN’s several LPNs and mental health workers. They have a supervisor for all 3 units..

    TAXPAYERS WAKE UP. THIS IS PUBLIC KNOWLEDGE CHECKOUT ——– TRANSPERANCY.COM

    Reply

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