The thing is even with a raise at a certain percentage, the pay would still be terrible for a licensed psychologist in this area. When I applied to the agency, I applied for a higher-level position, but they went with another candidate because she had a valuable language skill. I was in the process of being licensed, but very very close to it, so they offered me an MA level position. They offered me the very low range of the MA level position and I asked for the highest since I have my PhD. I negotiated with HR over the phone and they offered me mid-range, which was not terrific, but typical for a first-year psychologist. However, this was all verbal. When they sent me the preliminary offer letter it did not mention salary and said I would get the official offer letter after a background check and physical. After that, which, of course, took a while, I went to HR to sign my letter and it was 10000 less than what we discussed. When I confronted HR, I was told that I must have misheard them. I know I did not because they said they would offer “midrange” for that position and what the official offer letter said was only a few thousand dollars above the super lowball figure. I had two choices, as HR did not seem like they would bring it back to the department and re-negotiate: to either take the job offer or be unemployed. I considered being unemployed, but the market where I live is over-saturated and I knew it would likely take at least six months or so to find something. I decided to take it and treat it like another postdoc since the salary was about the same as what I received during my formal postdoc. I like the job overall and was hoping a higher-level position opens but it has not. Is it worth telling the administration that I am going to start looking for a new position or should I just look until I find something and then tell them.