The city of Bloomington hired away Decatur City Manager Tim
Gleason – who earns more than nearly every U.S. governor – with an even higher
salary finalized June 25.
In Bloomington, Gleason will make $185,000 in the first year of a four-year
contract, plus $7,500 for moving expenses, $550 per month in transportation
reimbursements and four weeks paid vacation. This deal – approved 8-0 by the
Bloomington City Council – pushes his earnings ahead of every U.S. governor
except Pennsylvania’s Gov. Tom Wolf. In Decatur, Gleason’s annual salary was
bumped this year to $176,500 from $169,100. This not only surpassed 45 U.S.
governors, but these earnings also far exceed those of whom he serves: According
to the U.S. Census Bureau, the median household income in Decatur is just over
$40,700.
Gleason’s high compensation has continued to grow in spite of his dubious
record. The Herald & Review highlights his introduction of a fee on fuel
purchases approved February 2016 as a hallmark of his tenure in Decatur. That
tax – 5 cents per gallon on unleaded gasoline and 1 cent per gallon for diesel
fuel – came on top of Decatur’s already-high tax burden. Decatur politicians
have long depended on tax hikes to compensate for its declining population. In
addition to the fuel tax, Decatur officials have instituted a food and beverage
tax and raised the city’s property tax levy as quick fixes intended to offset
the city’s shrinking tax base.
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But Bloomington and Decatur aren’t the only
Illinois cities that have awarded exorbitant salaries to city
managers. Mount Prospect and Joliet each pay their city managers
around $215,000, while Des Plaines’ city manager collects a salary
of $198,830. When Decatur increased Gleason’s salary in March, Mayor
Julie Moore Wolfe reasoned that Gleason’s contract was a “bargain,”
since Joliet’s city manager had been earning a higher salary.
But one municipality’s fiscal irresponsibility should not justify
another’s. Instead, local governments should look at spending
reforms to lessen their residents’ tax burden. According to property
data company ATTOM Data Solutions, the average effective property
tax rate in McLean County, where Bloomington is the county seat, was
2.46 percent in 2017 – more than double the national average.
Bloomington officials should bear that in mind before poaching
high-priced officials with taxpayer money.
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