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Community campaign collecting donations for Haiti victims
Ohio Supreme Court to hear Denny Ross case
Louisville man facing felony charge in tattooing of 1-year-old
Strickland says Ohio needs unpopular driver fees
Demjanjuk's attorney questions evidence
Worse weather elsewhere cancels Ohio flights
Quicken Loans Arena likely to restore water fountains
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Man robbed at Tallmadge Avenue eatery
Four teens restrain man, take items from his Akron home
Police: Ohio girl dies after fall into snow bank
Complaints against officer keep coming
Kerrigan family disputes autopsy
Another winter punch heading toward Ohio
Winter storm warning downgraded to advisory
Welcome to Akron's 'new' neighborhood
Police: Man tries to buy crack with credit card
Man admits stealing TV from Akron home
Cuyahoga Falls residents come home to find burning couch on balcony
Blogs:
First Bell - On Education:
A few words from Uncle Walt
Pets:
Pet telethon re-airs
The Heldenfiles:
Chipmunks "Squeakquel" on DVD/BD March 30
Akron Zips:
Late surge gives Zips ugly road win
Tribe Matters:
Blogmail response on Hafner
Cleveland Browns:
Stallworth's contract terminated
Balanced Ledger:
QB in Browns future: another mock draft
Kent State Sports:
KSU Notes – February 9
Cleveland Cavaliers:
NBA Power Rankings from Around the Internet
Buckeye Blogging:
Buckeyes grab 18 players on signing day
Varsity Letters:
Garfield at Buchtel basketball
All Da King's Men:
Palin At The Tea Party Convention
Blog of Mass Destruction:
What "We Now Know"
Akron Law Café:
Citizens United v. F.E.C. (Part 4): Kennedy's and O'Connor's Basic Approaches to Constitutional Decisionmaking – Top Down and Bottom Up
Car Chase:
Collector Car Hobby Loses One of the Best—Jim Roll
Let's Talk Real Estate:
Decisions Decisions: Credit Cards or Your Mortgage?
Ohio Travels with Betty:
Loucile is looking for a Lake Erie getaway in June for three kids, ages 1, 3, and 5.
Sound Check:
Talk of the Town – Top entertainment picks for the weekend
HRLite House:
Track HR Research
Akron Gamer:
'Tecmo Bowl' recreation of Super Bowl XLIV
See Jane Style:
Do IT this week: Layering
By Julie Carr Smyth
Associated Press statehouse correspondent
POSTED: 07:00 p.m. EST, Feb 05, 2009
COLUMBUS: Ohio's university presidents and their senior advisers, who rank among the state's highest paid public employees, will not be asked by Gov. Ted Strickland to take the pay and benefits cuts he's asking most state employees to take.
Led by Ohio State University president Gordon Gee, the highest paid public university president in America, the 154 individuals at Ohio's 14 four-year public institutions made a combined $35 million last year, according to figures compiled by The Associated Press.
Gee makes $775,008 a year before bonuses. The median salary for public university presidents in the state is $355,000, the data show.
Strickland seeks a 6 percent pay cut from unionized agency workers in the upcoming two-year budget. If such a cut were applied to all university presidents and their cabinets, it would amount to about $2.1 in million savings.
Strickland spokeswoman Amanda Wurst says the governor's budget plan targets only state agencies over which he has direct authority for the pay and benefits concessions which includes his own office. Along with the pay cut, he has asked state workers to assume 10 percent of their health insurance premiums to make ends meet.
Daniel Bennett, executive director of the Washington, D.C.-based Center for College Affordability & Productivity, advocates paring back university salaries and all but educational programs during hard times.
''Our view is that college presidents should be compensated for performance,'' he said. ''So if they're doing a great job, then we don't necessarily mind that they're getting high pay. But there should be some objective measure of that, such as the job they do retaining students or their graduation rate.''
Bruce Johnson, president of the Inter-University Council of Ohio, said colleges and universities have to spend what is necessary to attract talented people.
''These are big places with, many times, hospitals and thousands of employees,'' he said. ''And generally, as compared to private sector jobs, the CEO is not overcompensated.''
Bennett said his center, founded on the heels of the 2006 report of the Commission on the Future of Higher Education, discourages the operation of research hospitals, dormitories and student recreational facilities by universities, viewing such endeavors as pushing up the overall costs of college to students and taxpayers.
Data collected from all 14 four-year universities in Ohio show that 28 of the 154 administrators earn $300,000 or more per year. For 11, the figure includes a car allowance. The numbers don't include benefits or bonuses.
University of Cincinnati President Nancy Zimpher is paid $418,789, the next highest president's salary under Gee's.
The state's four-year universities are: Ohio State, Ohio University, University of Akron, University of Toledo, Kent State, Bowling Green, Central State, Cleveland State, Miami University of Ohio, Cincinnati, Youngstown State, Wright State, Shawnee State and the Northeastern Ohio Universities Colleges of Medicine and Pharmacy.
The eight highest paid central office university administrators in the state work at Ohio State, according to salary information provided to the AP by the institutions.
Ohio State spokeswoman Shelly Hoffman said the university annually benchmarks the salaries of its administrators and staff to national norms for major four-year research universities, and they are not out of line.
''The university aspires to be one of the Top 10 research universities in the country, and if you look at where we've come from in terms of our investment in the last 10 years or so, clearly you can see those results,'' she said.
Hoffman pointed out that 85 percent of Ohio State's budget comes from non-public sources and that its research hospital is the fastest growing employer in the region.
According to the college affordability center, the ratio of administrators per 1,000 students grew from 9.22 in 2003 to 10.06 in 2007 at public, four-year colleges.
The median salary for those administrators rose by 4 percent during the 2007-2008 fiscal year, outpacing inflation for the eleventh consecutive year, according to a report released last year by the College and University Professional Association for Human Resources.
During that same time, university presidents and CEOs saw their pay rise 8 percent, like administrator's outpacing inflation, according to The Chronicle of Higher Education's annual salary survey.
Strickland's budget continues a tuition freeze at 4-year institutions that has already been in place for two years. His proposed spending blueprint for the two years beginning July 1 calls for the freeze to continue for the first year and then rise by no more than 3.5 percent the following year.
Hoffman said the state's share of Ohio State tuition is only 13 percent. She said it is the nation's largest university and has an estimated $4 billion economic impact on the state's economy each year.
COLUMBUS: Ohio's university presidents and their senior advisers, who rank among the state's highest paid public employees, will not be asked by Gov. Ted Strickland to take the pay and benefits cuts he's asking most state employees to take.
Led by Ohio State University president Gordon Gee, the highest paid public university president in America, the 154 individuals at Ohio's 14 four-year public institutions made a combined $35 million last year, according to figures compiled by The Associated Press.
Gee makes $775,008 a year before bonuses. The median salary for public university presidents in the state is $355,000, the data show.
Strickland seeks a 6 percent pay cut from unionized agency workers in the upcoming two-year budget. If such a cut were applied to all university presidents and their cabinets, it would amount to about $2.1 in million savings.
Strickland spokeswoman Amanda Wurst says the governor's budget plan targets only state agencies over which he has direct authority for the pay and benefits concessions which includes his own office. Along with the pay cut, he has asked state workers to assume 10 percent of their health insurance premiums to make ends meet.
Daniel Bennett, executive director of the Washington, D.C.-based Center for College Affordability & Productivity, advocates paring back university salaries and all but educational programs during hard times.
''Our view is that college presidents should be compensated for performance,'' he said. ''So if they're doing a great job, then we don't necessarily mind that they're getting high pay. But there should be some objective measure of that, such as the job they do retaining students or their graduation rate.''
Bruce Johnson, president of the Inter-University Council of Ohio, said colleges and universities have to spend what is necessary to attract talented people.
''These are big places with, many times, hospitals and thousands of employees,'' he said. ''And generally, as compared to private sector jobs, the CEO is not overcompensated.''
Bennett said his center, founded on the heels of the 2006 report of the Commission on the Future of Higher Education, discourages the operation of research hospitals, dormitories and student recreational facilities by universities, viewing such endeavors as pushing up the overall costs of college to students and taxpayers.
Data collected from all 14 four-year universities in Ohio show that 28 of the 154 administrators earn $300,000 or more per year. For 11, the figure includes a car allowance. The numbers don't include benefits or bonuses.
University of Cincinnati President Nancy Zimpher is paid $418,789, the next highest president's salary under Gee's.
The state's four-year universities are: Ohio State, Ohio University, University of Akron, University of Toledo, Kent State, Bowling Green, Central State, Cleveland State, Miami University of Ohio, Cincinnati, Youngstown State, Wright State, Shawnee State and the Northeastern Ohio Universities Colleges of Medicine and Pharmacy.
The eight highest paid central office university administrators in the state work at Ohio State, according to salary information provided to the AP by the institutions.
Ohio State spokeswoman Shelly Hoffman said the university annually benchmarks the salaries of its administrators and staff to national norms for major four-year research universities, and they are not out of line.
''The university aspires to be one of the Top 10 research universities in the country, and if you look at where we've come from in terms of our investment in the last 10 years or so, clearly you can see those results,'' she said.
Hoffman pointed out that 85 percent of Ohio State's budget comes from non-public sources and that its research hospital is the fastest growing employer in the region.
According to the college affordability center, the ratio of administrators per 1,000 students grew from 9.22 in 2003 to 10.06 in 2007 at public, four-year colleges.
The median salary for those administrators rose by 4 percent during the 2007-2008 fiscal year, outpacing inflation for the eleventh consecutive year, according to a report released last year by the College and University Professional Association for Human Resources.
During that same time, university presidents and CEOs saw their pay rise 8 percent, like administrator's outpacing inflation, according to The Chronicle of Higher Education's annual salary survey.
Strickland's budget continues a tuition freeze at 4-year institutions that has already been in place for two years. His proposed spending blueprint for the two years beginning July 1 calls for the freeze to continue for the first year and then rise by no more than 3.5 percent the following year.
Hoffman said the state's share of Ohio State tuition is only 13 percent. She said it is the nation's largest university and has an estimated $4 billion economic impact on the state's economy each year.
You will never see the top take pay cuts.
It's only a matter of time before the university presidents go to Washington with tin cup in hand, to ask for a "deserved" bailout, too.
Governors, including Strickland, have already done it, and there seems to be no shame involved. Their "self-esteem" seems to be just fine after panhandling from taxpayers who are taxed out and can't afford to send their own kids to college.
5 Governors Seek $1 Trillion Federal Bailout
Fri., Jan. 2, 2009
MADISON, Wis. - Five Democratic governors are asking the federal government for a $1 trillion bailout package, including $250 billion for education and $150 billion in middle class tax cuts.
http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/090102/wi_governors_economy.html
What BS!
I think that nobody is worth more than $200K! Isn't that what the Presidential salary is???
Bring these people back down to a reasonable level.
This is insane! A total of leadership in Columbus. I do not look for things to get better in Ohio, with Strickland as governor. What an incredbile idiot he is turning out to be. I would rather have governor Taft.
What god examples they are setting....
Sorry, was supposed to be "what good examples they are setting...
...but the "top" leadership usually has a "god" complex and would never feel they should give up anything. It must have been a freudian slip.
off with their heads.start the revolution!
