Pennsylvania state lawmakers, judges and top executive branch officials will collect another annual salary increase in 2020, with the governor's salary passing $200,000 and rank-and-file lawmakers' base salaries passing $90,000.

The salary increases come as lawmakers consider increasing Pennsylvania's minimum wage for the first time since 2009 and a citizen activist presses Gov. Tom Wolf and lawmakers to increase Pennsylvania's tax forgiveness threshold for adults for the first time in two decades.

Their salary increase for the year ahead will be 1.9%, a figure tied by state law to the year-over-year change in the consumer price index published by the U.S. Department of Labor for urban consumers in the mid-Atlantic region.

The boost takes effect Sunday for lawmakers and Jan. 1 for judicial and executive branch officials.

The increase is about one-third larger than last year's increase, and comes at a time of steady growth in wages for private-sector workers.

Supreme Court Chief Justice Tom Saylor is highest-paid, pulling down a $4,000 raise to just above $221,000. The rest of the Supreme Court's seven members will be paid $215,000. Wolf's salary will rise about $3,800 to almost $201,700, although he donates it to charity. Both are among the nation's highest.