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The highest-paid president in this year's public school survey is Gordon Gee of Ohio State University, whose pay is worth more than $1.5 million including salary, retirement and deferred compensation. Gee is the only executive on the list to earn more than $1 million. The millionaires' club in private higher education is much larger
-- a point raised by those who argue public school executives are underpaid given that their schools are typically bigger and more complex to manage, and huge state employers. In the Chronicle's 2007-2008 analysis of private school presidents, a record 23 topped the $1 million mark. Median compensation rose 6.5 percent
-- 15.5 percent at major private research universities.
Gee said he's "not defensive" about what he earns given, among other things, that he took a pay cut to move from private Vanderbilt University and Ohio State is a large and complex university. "Some of it has to do, I hope, with my competence," Gee said. "I believe I have to earn that salary every day, so I work pretty hard ... Ohio State belongs to the people of Ohio. If on any given day they don't believe I'm earning what I earn, I'll be pumping gas in Vernal, Utah," Gee's birthplace. Gee donated $1 million to a student scholarship fund when he returned to Ohio State in 2007
-- it's his second tenure at the school -- and said he put his $200,000 bonus and $28,000 raise into the fund this year. Other presidents have refused bonuses, requested salary freezes or given money owed them to student aid. Rounding out the top five highest-paid public university presidents were Mark Emmert of the University of Washington ($905,004), Patrick Harker of the University of Delaware ($810,603), John Casteen of the University of Virginia ($797,048) and Francisco Cigarroa of the University of Texas system ($787,258). Eduardo Padron of Miami Dade College was the highest paid community college top executive, with a $548,459 pay package.
[Associated
Press;
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