It’s a bad time for big raises
The uproar surrounding the recent decision by Coast Community College
District trustees to increase the salaries of top-level employees is
not surprising. It also is right on the money. Now simply is not the
time to be handing out what are, for most of the positions,
eye-catching bumps in pay.
Last week, the trustees hired a new chancellor, Golden West
College’s Ken Yglesias, and raised the position’s salary from 186,608
to $190,000, plus $10,000 for travel and mileage expenses. That is a
relatively mild 1.8% increase.
Other top officials are faring much better, however. College
presidents and vice chancellors earned pay increases from the present
range of $129,631 to $131,805 up to $145,000 to $160,000. That is between an 11.5% and 22% jump, startling numbers even in the most
healthy economic times.
But these are not healthy economic times. Even as trustees are
handing out nearly $100,000 in raises, they have also cut 1,000
classes, are selling the KOCE television station for extra money and
shut down offices and campuses on Fridays this summer. Most other
district employees are unlikely to see raises because of the state’s
economic troubles.
Is it any wonder that people, including one of the five trustees,
are aghast at the extra spending? The timing and appearance of these
increases could hardly be worse.
The main argument of proponents of this extra spending say the
salary increases are needed to attract the best possible candidates.
They cite a salary survey of similar districts taken before the vote
that showed the district eighth of 11 for chancellor salaries and
second to last for presidents and vice chancellors.
It is a fine bolster for their position, but one we simply can’t
agree with, and not only because of the flaw in handing out big
raises when so much cutting is required.
We also fail to see how the draw of living and working along the
Orange County coast can’t balance out a position elsewhere that may
make $5,000 or $10,000 more.
At this point, it seems unlikely that the trustees will back away
from these decisions. Lacking that, they need to present far more
compelling reasons for the raises or in some way demonstrate that
they honestly understand why there is such opposition.
It is a lesson they desperately need to learn.
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