administrative pay

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What some U regents said about executive compensation

I’ve been at the second of three meetings of the University of Minnesota‘s Board of Regents’ special committee on executive compensation and administrative transitional leaves.

They’re reviewing the U’s policy on the subject, and how it compares to peer universities’. It comes after an uproar over news that former President Robert Bruininks’ paid out $2.8 million to 10 top administrators in leave and other compensation.

A lot of it was nuts-and-bolts stuff. Chairman Richard Beeson said the board hopes to wrap things up by the end of next session, which is May 25.

He sees three areas they’ll focus on:

  • Eliminating the separate administrative leave policy. He said they’ll consider rolling it into the faculty-sabbatical policy to make things easier.
  • Enforcing the requirement that administrators return to the U after their leave.
  • More detail and transparency on the hiring of administrators.
  • Initiation of an annual compensation report. The board would approve any significant changes.

Regents acknowledged the public outcry over the payouts. But they also said they didn’t want to get unnecessarily bogged down in administrative detail that should be delegated. Beeson said they shouldn’t be in the job interview business, but they need to find the right balance of accountability and delegation.

Regent John Frobenius told the committee:

“I don’t want to tie the president’s hands. But I also don’t want to answer media requests with, ‘I was not aware of that.’ “

President Eric Kaler’s chief of staff, Amy Phenix, said other public universities had common practices, but there didn’t appear to be any standard policy.

Beeson said toward the end:

“It’s ironic that in (in the area of executive compensation policy), we’ll end up with more structure and clarity than our peer groups. It’s a little concerning.”

The new UMN athletic director’s contract



I’ve been meaning to post this since I covered the appointment of Norwood Teague as the University of Minnesota’s new athletic director.

UMN regents to review executive pay policies

Bruininks

MPR Photo/Tom Scheck

It's not about him. It's about policy.

You may remember reports of University of Minnesota Eric Kaler taking heat from legislators over former President Bob Bruininks’ executive pay packages for top U administrators.

He promised them he’d look into the system that enabled that.

Here’s an update that just came in:

Board of Regents committee begins review of executive compensation and administrative transitional leave policies on April 26

A special committee of the University of Minnesota Board of Regents will begin a review of current university policies on executive compensation and administrative transitional leaves and explore potential changes.

The committee will conduct its work in public meetings beginning at 1:30 p.m. Thursday, April 26 in the West Committee Room, McNamara Alumni Center, 200 Oak St. S.E., Minneapolis.

“Regents understand that while compensation and leaves for our senior administrators must be competitive, they must also be prudent,” said Board of Regents Chair Linda Cohen. “We are undertaking this review as a matter of sound governance because oversight and policy development are among the Board of Regents’ core responsibilities. The Board also seeks to be responsive to policymakers and the public.”

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How former U president Bruininks replied to an invitation to talk

MPR Photo/Nikki Tundel

Bruininks takes some guesses in his budget

Just letting you know what former University of Minnesota President Bob Bruininks told Jayne Solinger, producer for MPR’s All Things Considered, when she invited him to come onto the show.

She wanted him to talk about the controversial separation/transition packages he granted 10 top administrators when they left their jobs.

Here’s his reply:

 

From: Robert Bruininks [mailto:bruin001@umn.edu]
Sent: Wednesday, March 07, 2012 2:15 PM
To: Solinger, Jayne
Subject: Re: Possible interview?

Dear Jayne,

I am sorry, but I have other commitments today that would make it impossible to do the interview. I would suggest that you contact Ray Cotton (202-434-7322), who is considered an expert in this area and could speak about why such policies are needed and desirable in higher education. I believe he would be willing to talk with you.

If you do proceed with a story today, you may include the following statement from me:

“Although there has been some conflation in the media of existing and transition compensation for departing administrators, without question the dollar amounts are still large. It should be noted that we faced the departure of an unprecedented number of senior executives who together had contributed more than 150 years of outstanding service – and many of whom continue to do important work on behalf of the University and the state. These outstanding leaders succeeded in advancing the University’s academic profile, productivity, and reputation during a particularly challenging period. I am comfortable that I acted in the best interests of the institution and in conformance with existing University policies, which provide presidential discretion on these matters.”

Sincerely,

Bob Bruininks

Should U execs retire at the pay standard of other employees?

University of Minnesota disability services employee Scott Marshall writes in the Star Tribune how the U could avoid paying its top execs extravagant retirement payouts:

Short of stopping the practice of paying administrators anything at all when their job responsibilities are done, how about this: When a university administrator leaves her position, the university pays that person the wage of the lowest-paid union worker on campus?

That would give the person a year to “retool” (or leave) at a wage that university administrators seem to think is acceptable for 2,080 hours of work.

If it’s enough for an employee with real responsibilities to Goldy, then surely it’s enough for someone without formal responsibility who is spending their time retooling for whatever is next.

Read the full commentary here.

How departing U officials got paid so well

“These are nothing but sweetheart deals and golden handshakes. The Legislature and the governor should be demanding that they look at this across the board.”

– Former charities overseer Dean Zerbe to the Star Tribune on $2.8 million in “handsome” administrative compensation packages signed by former university President Robert Bruininks. They included long paid leaves, retirement and health insurance contributions.

Read the full story here. (It may require a subscription.)

What the MnSCU CFO told pols about retirement payouts



Here’s the full text of MnSCU CFO Laura King testimony at yesterday’s legislative subcommittee hearing on MnSCU sick pay and vacation payouts to retiring employees.

If you know MnSCU, you can skip the first couple of pages and focus on the retirement issue.

What Sen. Parry wrote MnSCU Chancellor Rosenstone



Here’s a copy of Sen. Mike Parry’s letter that I referred to in yesterday’s post on the hearing over MnSCU’s retirement payouts.