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WEST VIRGINIA RECORD

Tuesday, November 5, 2024

Putnam Circuit Clerk employees' pay grievance denied for now

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WINFIELD – Employees of the Putnam County Circuit Clerk’s office now are playing the waiting game after taking their pay grievance to the county commission.

The three Putnam County Commissioners met in executive session Tuesday morning after their regularly scheduled meeting to listen to the grievance that was filed last month.

“Deny at this time, but we’ll do further research for our next budget hearing,” Commissioner Steve Andes said when the meeting was opened back to the public.

Hurricane attorney Shawn Bayliss, who is representing the circuit clerk employees, said he understands the county is tied to the current year budget. The commission has 30 days to issue a written response to the grievance. Then, Bayliss said the matter might be appealed to Circuit Court.

“A woman just left the office to work at Wendy’s,” Bayliss said. “She’s now making $1.25 more an hour than what she was in the circuit clerk’s office.

“But, we are encouraged by the fact that the commissioners said they would look into the matter. I’m not sure they understood the gravity of the situation.”

Bayliss said some of the women who work in the Circuit Clerk Ronnie Matthews’ office nearly would qualify for food stamps on their current salary.

“They are left with such a menial salary that people who work at Wendy’s make more than the people who are entrusted with handling every child support payment, every alimony payment … any judgment of substance,” he said. “They do their job well, and they do it with integrity.

“State code says the employees are to be paid a reasonable and proper wage. It is our opinion they are not being paid a reasonable and proper wage.”

The circuit clerk office employees filed the grievance, claiming they have been neglected and mistreated financially after reviewing the minutes from a Putnam County Commission meeting in which employees of the County Clerk’s office were given raises.

“Within the minutes, it states the County Clerk has hired a new full time employee with a starting pay at $11.19 an hour,” the grievance states. “We have experienced employees in the Circuit Clerk’s office who are not making near that amount and have not received raises when other departments have.

“We also have a chief deputy with 35-plus years (of) experience who is not making the same pay as other chief deputies in her position.”

The grievance also states that Matthews was told July 31 by County Manager Brian Donat that if employees in his office wanted a raise, the commission could do away with their insurance and possibly their one-hour paid lunch.

“We do not believe the County Clerk’s office had to take a cut in benefits when their received their raise,” the grievance states. “Regardless of the threat, we feel this is a justified request. We, as an office, feel that this is discrimination.”

The grievance states that the Circuit Clerk employees are requesting fair and equal relief based on the current pay scale of other clerks.

“We do not fault the other employees for the money they received,” it states. “However, we feel that we are just as entitled to fair wages as well.”

The grievance says the County Clerk’s office had money left in its budget, but that the Circuit Clerk’s office did as well. That money, the grievance states, was relinquished to the county.

“We feel this constitutes unfair wages,” according to the grievance, which is signed by the 11 Circuit Clerk employees, including Chief Deputy Darlene Smith.

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