Firefighter Earned $300K in Overtime by Working More Hours Than Actually Exist

Via Reason

Tim Berger / Glendale News/Los Angeles Times / Polaris/Newscom

Los Angeles firefighter Donn Thompson had a busy year in 2017. If his pay stubs are to be believed, he literally never stopped working.

Data obtained by Transparent California, a project of the Nevada Policy Research Institute, show that Thompson pulled down $300,000 in overtime pay during 2017, on top of his $92,000 salary. Over the past four years, Thompson has earned more than $1 million in overtime, according to Transparent California’s database. Thompson’s ability to work so many hours “boggles the mind,” says Robert Fellner, director of research at the institute.

To earn that much in overtime pay, Thompson would have had to work more hours than actually exist in a single year. Either the highly paid firefighter found a way to stretch the space-time continuum or something fishy is going on.

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Here’s how the math breaks down. Thompson, like all firefighters in Los Angeles, works 2,912 hours every year. With a base salary of $92,000, that comes to an hourly rate of $31.60. That means Thompson would earn overtime pay at a rate of $47.40 per hour—that’s one and a half times the base rate. But earning $302,000 at a rate of $47.40 per hour would require working more than 6,370 hours. Add that to the 2,912 hours he worked as a salaried employee, and you get more than 9,280 hours worked, despite the fact that there are only 8,760 hours in a year.

Thompson is probably taking advantage of contract provisions that boost overtime pay above the typical rate, says Fellner, though it’s unclear for now how that affects the calculations. (Transparent California is awaiting more payroll data from the fire department.)

Cashing in on the Los Angeles Fire Department’s generous overtime rules is nothing new for Thompson, who might very well be the highest paid firefighter in American history. A 1996 Los Angeles Times story highlighted Thompson as a prime example of what the paper called “paycheck generosity” at the department. From 1993 through 1995, the Times found, Thompson made $219,649 in overtime pay. At the time, the department was spending more than $58 million annually on overtime, an amount the paper called “budget-wrenching”; it far surpassed what fire departments in other big cities were paying. The Fire Department of New York, for example, at the time paid about a third as much in overtime.

In 2009, when the Los Angeles Daily News reported that the L.A. fire department’s overtime budget had grown by more than 60 percent in a decade, Thompson was once again riding high. He had earned “$173,335 in overtime in addition to his nearly $100,000 base salary while working at Fire Station 19 on Sunset Boulevard in Brentwood,” the paper reported, citing 2008 figures.

In 2014, when the San Diego Union-Tribune featured Thompson in a story about runaway overtime costs at California fire departments, he told the paper that he “basically lived at the station” and didn’t go home very often.

“The first thing [people] think of is firefighters sitting around at the station, but they’re not just handing out free money over here,” Thompson said. “I’m working hard.”

The Los Angeles Times found quite the opposite when it investigated overtime. In the 1996 article, the Times said most overtime hours are not connected to “fires or other emergencies. Instead, most of it goes for replacing those who are out because of vacations, holidays, injuries, training, illnesses or personal leaves.”

While Thompson’s payouts are certainly eye-popping, he’s hardly the only firefighter in L.A. reaping huge taxpayer-funded earnings. During 2017, the Los Angeles Fire Department had 512 employees who cashed in with at least $100,000 in overtime pay, according to Transparent California. That’s a tenfold increase over the 51 employees who got six-figure overtime pay as recently as 2012. Thompson was one of 26 employees to get at least $200,000 in overtime pay last year, when the department reported spending $198 million on overtime pay—a 74 percent increase since 2012.

Perhaps the only silver lining for the taxpayers is the fact that overtime pay can no longer be factored into pension benefits, a consequence of a 2012 pension reform bill signed by Gov. Jerry Brown. It is perhaps not surprising that a dramatic increase in overtime payouts began the same year Brown signed that bill.

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18 Comments
BUCKHED
BUCKHED
May 29, 2018 12:59 pm

Kinda’ like this dude making 241K as a highway patrolman…to rob and to steal is their motto. I bet no one went to jail .

Gilnut
Gilnut
May 29, 2018 1:25 pm

Faulty article all around, though I agree with the ‘general sentiment’ of it. Simply Google California overtime laws and you’ll see why it’s a faulty article. In short, not all overtime is the same, employee’s rate time-and -a-half or double-time, depending on hours/days worked. Overtime itself is also calculated differently based on whether you are hourly or salaried. Took me less than 5 minutes to get facts that are sorely lacking here.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Gilnut
May 29, 2018 2:11 pm

And? You’re defending this?

Gilnut
Gilnut
  Anonymous
May 29, 2018 3:00 pm

Nope, I can agree with the general idea of an article and disagree with it being non-factual based. It’s a common bait and switch that so many people fall for. It’s an opinion article disguised as factual based. I’m just pointing out that the so-called ‘facts’ of the article are false. It’s called reading comprehension.

Philbert Desanex
Philbert Desanex
  Gilnut
May 29, 2018 3:45 pm

faulty article all around? reading comprehension? the article clearly admits “Thompson is probably taking advantage of contract provisions that boost overtime pay above the typical rate, says Fellner, though it’s unclear for now how that affects the calculations. (Transparent California is awaiting more payroll data from the fire department.)” No bait and switch or anything lacking there.

The article also relies on quotes and data derived directly from the LA Times and Daily News. Do you consider that ‘non-factual?’

Gilnut
Gilnut
  Philbert Desanex
May 29, 2018 3:57 pm

The article purports that overtime is time-and-a-half and that there are not enough hours in a year to make that much overtime, it then goes on from there. I’m simply pointing out that what the article purports is incorrect. So yes, I consider that “non-factual”. Google California overtime laws yourself if you don’t believe me.

This article could have been much better written, based in fact, and still gotten the same idea across. Words matter, facts matter, and we would all be better off if we held people to a higher standard in their “opinions”.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
May 29, 2018 1:30 pm

About 70 percent of America’s firefighters are volunteers, and 85 percent of the nation’s fire departments are all or mostly volunteer, according to NFPA.

Government ruins everything it touches. There is not a need for every fire department to be volunteer, but there is absolutely NO reason for the government to run any of them. STEALING from everyone is not necessary for a service that everyone requires and that could be financed through countless voluntary mechanisms (though one’s property insurance, through subscription service, etc.). These parasites have lived high on the hog for far too long while the city “leaders” simply pander to them based on the promises of ever-increasing property values and taxation. Nothing short of immoral.

Dave Braga
Dave Braga
  MrLiberty
May 29, 2018 2:17 pm

No need to try to defend any gov’t employee earning $1 million in overtime. In 40 years I’ve never been paid a dime in overtime in IT. It’s just a 50-hour week and some weekends.

Rife
Rife
May 29, 2018 1:52 pm

NYC garbage men drive Maseratis…..

Dave Braga
Dave Braga
May 29, 2018 2:16 pm

Our ‘heroes’. Right. Unions exist only to legally extract as much money from taxpayers as possible. Just getting worse and worse. Anytime a government earns 200-300% above salary and then built into pension – when private industry often has all extra work built into an $80k salary. Such theft.

whiskey tango foxtrot
whiskey tango foxtrot
May 29, 2018 2:30 pm

Public Sector “unions” are a contradiction in terms. You don’t “collectively bargain” off the back of the taxpayer. I hope all their pensions go up in smoke before any one of ’em see a dime.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
  whiskey tango foxtrot
May 29, 2018 6:39 pm

What is shocking is that even FDR opposed public sector unions on the very basis that it was completely inappropriate for anyone to engage in collective bargaining, etc. with the government when the taxpayers were on the hook for the bill (as opposed to a private corporation that controls its own internal finances). Pretty sad when even FDR got it, but they are more rampant than they ever were in the 30s and 40s.

Here is a letter of FDR’s to Luther Steward, President of the National Federation of Federal Employees in 1937:
http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/?pid=15445

BB
BB
May 29, 2018 2:34 pm

I can’t wait to see southern California burn to the damn ground.These union fuckers deserve our strongest contempt. I just hope El Coyote gets out ok.

underfire
underfire
May 29, 2018 2:50 pm

I wonder how many like me, (in the private sector) have become weary to the bone of supporting the parasite class.

rich
rich
May 29, 2018 2:59 pm

One question. Who is his clout ?

digitalpennmedia
digitalpennmedia
May 29, 2018 3:07 pm

fishy…. hell, in LA anytime there has been talk of cutting back on firefighters/hiring/hours there has been a “mysterious” wildfire blaze that suddenly starts up just days before a vote is scheduled on the proposed measures. Cali is nothing more than the tinpot dictatorships we see regularly in central/south america … the only difference is that debt spending has allowed for this runaway bullshit to continue to occur. Of course, its hardly just the firefighters that have done this… pd’s, hp’s, sheriffs, councilmembers and so on. Every once in a while someone gets thrown under the bus to give the impression that people that do this stuff get caught, not of course to deter the action but to calm the sheeple.

Boat Guy
Boat Guy
May 29, 2018 4:59 pm

Wow in 1980 average steel workers earned between $8 & $12 bucks an hour and more were killed or died from job related injuries and health issues than police and fire fighters that’s even taking into account the percentage numbers per positions . Funny as American industry collapsed and was bankrupted along with those former tax base supporting jobs the cry was “ those union salary and benefit demands were ridiculous” !
Ya sure they were but Pelosi and her ilk are worth every penny along with the fireman prince !
Local Government Budgets nationwide are bankrupt , just cannot figure that one out ??? LMAO

Gubmint Cheese
Gubmint Cheese
May 29, 2018 9:57 pm

First responder heroes…Fire fighters… like a frat club

The new guys wash & polish up the trucks, the mid seniority guys make the Chili, and check gear, the old timers sleep on the clock OT ,dozing for dollars.

Many of our local barn fires have been discovered to be set by bored volunteer firemen.