Public University Presidents Are Prospering, Annual Compensation Study Finds

planomateo

Member
Hmm, kinda surprised who's on the list. $2.5m ($1.8m of that is deferred according to the linke.




http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/13/e...esidents-are-prospering-study-finds.html?_r=0

Public University Presidents Are Prospering, Annual Compensation Study Finds
By TAMAR LEWIN
Published: May 12, 2013

In the 2011-12 fiscal year, the nation’s highest paid public university president was Graham B. Spanier, the president of Pennsylvania State University, who was forced out in November 2011 over his handling of a child sex abuse scandal involving a football coach.

According to the annual compensation report by The Chronicle of Higher Education, Mr. Spanier was paid $2.9 million in 2011-12, including $1.2 million in severance pay and $1.2 million in deferred compensation.

“The fact that Graham Spanier turns out to be the highest paid president in the country says something about the nature of compensation packages for people who leave under a cloud,” said Jack Stripling, the Chronicle reporter who worked on the survey. “Severance agreements are often very lucrative.”

Three other public university presidents also had compensation topping $1 million: Jay Gogue of Auburn University, at $2,542,865; E. Gordon Gee of Ohio State University, at $1,899,420; and Alan G. Merten of George Mason University, at $1,869,369. Mr. Merten retired from George Mason last June after 16 years as president.

Mr. Gee, who in 2007 became the first public university president to earn more than $1 million, had a base salary last year of $830,439, the highest among the 212 chief executives included in the Chronicle report. He is known for prodigious fund-raising energy, which has brought the university more than $1.6 billion since he took the post, and for the lavish lifestyle his job supports, including a rent-free mansion with an elevator, a pool and a tennis court and flights on private jets.

Mr. Stripling said there had been a sea change in the last few years, with the rich getting richer and some pay packages exceeding not just $1 million, but $2 million. Deferred compensation agreements can increase pay drastically, as was the case with Mr. Gogue, whose pay went from $720,000 to $2.5 million in a single year when he completed a five-year contract.

But the biggest growth last year, Mr. Stripling said, was in the $600,000 to $700,000 range, a category that included 28 chief executives, up from only 13 the previous year.

According to the Chronicle report, the median total compensation for the presidents of public research universities was $441,392, up 4.7 percent from the previous year’s $421,395. The median base salary, $373,800, was up 2 percent from $366,519 the previous year.

Rounding out the top 10 earners were Jo Ann M. Gora of Ball State University ($984,647); Mary Sue Coleman of the University of Michigan system ($918,783); Charles W. Steger of Virginia Tech ($857,749); Mark G. Yudof of the University of California system ($847,149); Bernard J. Machen of the University of Florida ($834,562); and Francisco G. Cigarroa of the University of Texas system ($815,833).




http://chronicle.com/article/Executive-Compensation-at/139093#id=table


President
* Partial-year compensation
Total compensation (Rank)Base payBase pay as
% of total
Assumed office in
spanier_3179.jpg
Graham B. Spanier *
Pennsylvania State University at University Park
Full profile →
$2,906,721 (1st)$350,95912.1%September 1995
gogue_6.jpg
Jay Gogue
Auburn University
Full profile →
$2,542,865 (2nd)$482,07019.0%July 2007
gee_2874.jpg
E. Gordon Gee
Ohio State University-Main Campus
Full profile →
$1,899,420 (3rd)$830,43943.7%October 2007
merten_3744.jpg
Alan G. Merten
George Mason University
Full profile →
$1,869,369 (4th)$427,36922.9%July 1996
gora_1172.jpg
Jo Ann M. Gora
Ball State University
Full profile →
$984,647 (5th)$431,24443.8%August 2004
coleman_14784.jpg
Mary Sue Coleman
University of Michigan system (Ann Arbor)
Full profile →
$918,783 (6th)$585,78363.8%September 2002
steger_3804.jpg
Charles W. Steger
Virginia Tech
Full profile →
$857,749 (7th)$496,68857.9%January 2000
yudof_542.jpg
Mark G. Yudof
University of California system
Full profile →
$847,149 (8th)$591,08469.8%June 2008
machen_843.jpg
Bernard J. Machen
University of Florida
Full profile →
$834,562 (9th)$515,15861.7%December 2003
cigarroa_3648.jpg
Francisco G. Cigarroa
University of Texas system
Full profile →
$815,833 (10th)$751,92092.2%February 2009

<thead class="headers">
</thead><tbody>
</tbody>
 
What do these guys have in common? Highest paid college presidents in the US.

The Chronicle of Higher Education released its list of salaries for public college presidents, and Auburn University President Jay Gogue is a top earner.

Gogue earned more than$2.5 million in 2012, making his pay the second highest salary in the U.S.

The highest paid was ex-Penn State President Graham Spanier at more than $2.9 million. Spanier was forced out of office following the sex abuse scandal involving former defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky.

Third place went to Ohio State University President E. Gordon Gee, with about $1.89 million.
 
Can't believer they would pay him that much in deferred comp. Wonder what the criteria were?

Where'd he come to the barn from anyway?
 
Back
Top Bottom