Eye-popping overtime: Prison employees double salaries, costing millions

Seventeen employees of Nebraska’s prison system more than doubled the size of their paychecks during the past fiscal year. 

How? They made more in overtime payments than they did in base salary, according to data the state recently provided the Flatwater Free Press.

Some 145 employees of the Nebraska Department of Correctional Services made at least half their base salary in overtime — part of spiraling overtime costs in the prison system that have cost taxpayers $48 million in the past three years.

The state’s highest overtime earner – a corrections caseworker named Donald Hiatt — made nearly double his salary in overtime between July 2020 and June 2021. He earned a base pay of $47,840, and an additional $97,400 in overtime hours. 

Hiatt’s total annual payment: $145,240. He did not return Facebook messages and emails seeking comment.

The large individual overtime payments reflect an ongoing crisis faced by the state’s prisons, long overcrowded and now severely understaffed, according to state leaders and experts. 

Scott Frakes

And while recent raises for prison staff offer some hope, Nebraska’s most understaffed prisons have seen little relief in reducing the need for overtime hours, said Scott Frakes, director of the Nebraska Department of Correctional Services.

In the short term, overtime will cost taxpayers even more: Before the recent raises, it cost 15% more to pay overtime than it did to hire a new employee. The raises — which also supercharge overtime pay – boost that difference to about 55%, Frakes said.

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“It will always be more economical to find and hire and onboard new people,” Frakes said. “That’s been our emphasis all along, to reduce mandatory overtime to the bare minimum.” 

These overtime payments pad paychecks. They can also contribute to burnout, fatigue and high turnover rates among prison staff, say experts and former guards — especially because overtime work often becomes mandatory for essential prison employees. 

Hiatt, for example, worked an average of 97 hours per week – his regular 40 and then 57 more in overtime hours – according to state prison officials. The next highest overtime earners, Curtis Hurst and Bemnet Habtu, both corrections corporals, worked an average of 49 and 50 hours in overtime, respectively.

Mark Foxall

“You’ve got to be on your toes, be alert,” said Mark Foxall, former director of the Douglas County Department of Corrections and now a faculty member at the University of Nebraska at Omaha. “Those things are challenging in an eight-hour shift, let alone a 16-hour shift. Are you as alert in hour 14 as you were in hour 1? How does that physical and mental fatigue accumulate over the course of several overtime shifts in a week?” 

Six months after the initial records request, the State of Nebraska in January disclosed the overtime pay earned by all state employees during the 2021 fiscal year. The Flatwater Free Press has added that data to a searchable state salary database.  

The state spent $35.7 million on overtime during that year. Nearly half, $15.4 million, went to employees of a single department, the state’s prison system.

The top five highest overtime earners in the state were all corrections employees. Out of the top 20 highest earners, 15 worked in corrections.

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The Flatwater Free Press reached out to ten of the top overtime earners in corrections. None returned emails seeking comment.  

These top earners, who often work up to 80 hours a week, are most likely volunteering for the majority of those shifts, Frakes said.

The union contract grants staff members the right to work overtime without an upper limit, and seniority determines who can claim voluntary overtime shifts.  

“What we look for is performance, as opposed to straight hours,” Frakes said. “Are they able to perform at the level that we establish good performance? Are they staying awake and alert? If they’re doing all those things, then there’s no issue to address.”

Mandatory overtime shifts, on the other hand, are assigned in order of reverse seniority. Recently, Frakes said, some prison guards have often been required to stay four more hours after their regular 12-hour shift.  

The state’s two maximum security prisons, located in Tecumseh and at Lincoln’s Nebraska State Penitentiary, rely heavily on these overtime shifts to fill mandatory posts. 

Some corrections staff like the overtime, said Michael Chipman, president of the Nebraska Fraternal Order of Police 88, the union representing corrections officers and other security staff. But even an excessive amount of voluntary overtime still causes burnout, he said. 

Doug Koebernick

Nebraska correctional officers described a “continual sense of fatigue” and worried about the impact of overtime on their well-being, according to a 2021 report by Doug Koebernick, inspector general of the Nebraska Correctional System. 

Former employees told the Flatwater Free Press that the long hours took them away from their families, and brought on panic attacks and sleep loss.

Rapid turnover continues to be an issue for Nebraska’s prison system. By the end of September, state corrections had lost 330 prison guards over the course of 2021. The department projected that one out of every four Nebraska prison employees would leave their job in 2021, according to its most recent quarterly report.  

“Corrections is not the most glamorous job. It’s a challenging job,” said Foxall, discussing high turnover in American prisons. “Hiring problems predate the pandemic. The pandemic has exacerbated problems.” 

The state hopes the recent raises announced for correctional officers will help recruit and retain staff, lowering the department’s reliance on overtime to keep afloat. Within six weeks of the change, the department saw 630 applications for corporal positions, compared to 162 applications the five weeks prior.

The department has hired about 140 of those applicants, Frakes said. 

But the new union contract will drive up overtime expenses as well — in addition to increasing hourly salaries, the contract boosted overtime pay from time-and-a-half to double. 

Since the raises went into effect, droves of corrections employees have volunteered for overtime or holiday shifts, Koebernick said.

“Now, with the increase of people wanting to get overtime because of the pay, I think we’re going to see a significant change in the amount of money spent on overtime,” Koebernick said. “I think we’re going to get blown away.” 

That 100 Nebraska prison employees made more than half their base salary in overtime last year is a testament to the level of need, said Eric Thompson, director of the Bureau of Business Research at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. It signals that there’s a limited number of people qualified to do the essential — and often unpleasant — work of guarding and managing the cases of inmates.  

Rampant overtime is far from ideal. But it’s also currently necessary, said Dustin White, an economics professor at the University of Nebraska at Omaha.

“In the short run, you just have to find people,” White said. “It’s essentially a bribe. You’re trying to figure out, how do I convince people to do this for now until I can figure out a better solution?”

By Natalia Alamdari

Natalia Alamdari has worked at newspapers throughout the country. Her reporting has taken her to small town shooting ranges in Missouri, contentious school board meetings in Delaware, and aquariums in Texas. Working at the Flatwater Free Press is a return to Nebraska — in college, she spent a summer interning at the Omaha World-Herald. She is a graduate of the University of Missouri-Columbia and native Texan. When she’s not reporting, you can probably find her baking, petting her cat, or trying out a new crafty hobby.

By Yanqi Xu

Yanqi Xu (pronounced yen-chee shu) most recently covered courts and law for NC Newsline in North Carolina, focusing on criminal justice, voting rights, housing justice and redistricting. Prior to that, she was part of a team at the Investigative Reporting Workshop that developed the Public Accountability Project, a newsroom search tool that hosts more than 1 billion public records in one place. She hails from China, where she first developed an interest in telling stories that resonate with people, no matter where they are.

3 Comments

Yes–I talked to one guy who was working 16 hours a day, six days a week. His plan was to save up enough money to live for a year and then to leave. We need to let more incarcerated people out and to keep them out!

This article almost seems like a complaint. “How dare these people make this much money.” Instead of writing complaint articles why don’t you apply and help out with the staffing problems? Bring all your family and friends to apply with you.

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