Bryan Blasts $35K Gov Employee Minimum
- Mark Dworkin
- Jun 12
- 3 min read
St. Croix Times Staff

USVI - Governor Albert Bryan Jr. is calling the Legislature’s unfunded pay mandate, to increase to $35,000 minimum salary for all government employees, irresponsible and catastrophic to the Government of the Virgin Islands budget. The Governor is strongly urging caution following the Legislature’s passage of Bill No. 36-0053.
While reaffirming his full support for increasing wages for public workers, Governor Bryan said the measure, enacted without a clear and immediate plan for how to pay for it, threatens to undo years of hard-earned fiscal progress.
“This bill, while sounding good in principle and aiming to help people with the rising cost of living, is nothing more than a feel good measure that gives struggling Virgin Islanders a false sense of hope,” Governor Bryan said. “The truth is that it is an empty promise. If enacted into law, it will lead to cost-cutting measures that will directly impact the very employees it claims to support and will set us back financially as a government and a people.”
Governor Bryan took aim at the Legislature’s suggestion that the government “has months” to find the money before the October 1, 2025 effective date, calling the claim disingenuous and misleading.
“Hope is not a plan,” the Governor said. “Kicking the can down the road does not make this mandate any more affordable. Passing a bill of this magnitude without even a hearing or testimony, or identifying the revenues to fund it is reckless and puts the entire government, and by extension the people of the Virgin Islands, back in the same saddle we sat in for decades. That is how we accumulated 225 million dollars in unpaid retroactive wage obligations that my administration is now working feverishly to resolve.”
According to the Office of Budget and Management (OMB), the cost of implementing Bill No. 36-0053 in its first year would exceed 37.9 million dollars.
Roughly 1,300 employees would receive an average raise of $4,000 totaling $5.2 million.
Salary adjustments for 3,000 additional employees would increase costs to $12 million.
Fringe benefits at 46 percent would add another $7.9 million
A 3 percent increase in employer contributions to to the Government Employees Retirement System (GERS) would add $13 million
Furthermore, the increase will further place our struggling hospitals, Water and Power Authority, and Waste Management Authority in a more precarious financial position jeopardizing our basic needs for healthcare, electricity, and sanitary living conditions.
Governor Bryan warned that absorbing these costs without corresponding revenue would force deep cuts to critical government services, halt ongoing infrastructure investments and reverse the administration’s work to restore financial solvency.
“We have fought hard to stabilize our finances, repay workers and invest in infrastructure and essential services. This bill threatens all of that,” Governor Bryan stated. “It does not build on our progress. It threatens to dismantle it.”
The Governor also criticized the Legislature for bypassing the collective bargaining process and introducing a sweeping wage mandate during active negotiations with major government unions.
“This bill interferes with union bargaining and undermines the structure we have in place to negotiate wages fairly and sustainably,” the Governor said. “It sends the wrong message and sets a dangerous precedent.”
Governor Bryan noted that his administration has already taken meaningful action to improve compensation, including repaying 8 percent salary cuts from 2011, distributing more than 60 million dollars in retroactive wages and securing raises for teachers, police officers, firefighters, corrections officers and other frontline personnel.
He reaffirmed his commitment to better wages but made clear that any such increase must be implemented responsibly and with a fully developed funding plan. He emphasized that enacting this measure without the means to properly fund it puts the Government of the Virgin Islands right back in the same position that led to the 225 million dollar debt in retroactive wage payments his administration is currently working to address.
“This bill is not a solution. It is a shortcut that leads us back to a place of financial instability,” Governor Bryan reiterated. “We cannot afford to make promises we cannot keep. Our people deserve better than symbolic gestures that cannot be sustained. They deserve real, responsible progress.”
He called on the Legislature to return to the table, work in partnership with the Executive Branch and develop a phased and financially sound approach to wage reform.
“We must lift our employees up, not set them up for disappointment. If we are truly serious about helping working families and building a stronger government, then we must be just as serious about how we pay for it,” the Governor concluded.