How much does Garden City pay employees? Search our 2024 database
Located between Boise and Eagle, Garden City is a small city of 13,000 people with under 100 employees. What are they paid?
Charles Wadams, the city’s attorney, and police Chief Cory Stambaugh are tied for the highest pay at $160,000 per year.
Records technicians and program, data and customer service specialists are the lowest-paid full-time employees, earning about $40,000 a year. City Council members, who work part-time, earn about $10,000 annually.
Mayor John Evans, who works part-time, earns $50,000 per year.
On average, full-time employees earn $82,000 per year.
Below is a searchable database showing the pay of all city employees as of December 2024. Some searches will contain multiple pages of results.
The Idaho Statesman obtained this data through a public records request. Here’s how and why we did it:
BEHIND THE STORY
MOREWhy did we make this public?
Public employees work for taxpayers. Their salaries and wages are public information.
Idaho state employee pay has been publicly available on various websites, including the Idaho Statesman’s, for years. But there hasn’t always been an easy way to see what Treasure Valley’s local governments pay their employees.
We believe there is value in opening the curtains to show how governments spend taxpayer money. Not only can that sunshine help prevent and catch fraud, waste and abuse, it lets us see how wages differ between, and within, the many offices of our local governments.
Have an idea for another database? Think we should make more information public? Contact us at newsroom@idahostatesman.com or tips@idahostatesman.com.
How did we get the data?
We requested payroll data from local governments in May 2023.
What's the fine print?
First, this is a snapshot in time. Employees are hired, fired, promoted and given raises every day.
Second, employees aren’t all paid the same way. For the most part, you can figure out an employee’s annual pay by multiplying their hourly rate by 2,080. But that’s not always true. Some employees are part-time. Some, like council members, are paid a set amount. Others work more hours than normal and/or get overtime — emergency first responders especially — so their annual pay may be higher than their hourly rate would suggest.
Finally, the “hire date” isn’t necessarily the date that person first joined the ranks of public servants. Some employees are seasonal, temporary or took other jobs between stints working for the city or county.