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According to a survey by the Chronicle
Higher Education released on Monday, a dozen presidents of private colleges
earned more than $1 million in compensation during the 2006-07 year.
The annual survey found that fifty-nine
presidents took home more than $500,000 in salary and benefits during the
2007-08 academic year and the number receiving more than $700,000 rose from
eight to 15.
David J. Sargent, president of Suffolk University
in Massachusetts,
is No.1 highest paid president of a private university, bringing in $2,800,461
in salary and benefits after 52 years at the Boston-based institution. “You can’t
put a price on what David Sargent has done for the university, our students,
and the city of Boston,”
spokesman Greg Gatlin was quoted as saying.
Sargent was followed by Northwestern
University President Henry Bienen, who received $1,742,560, and Columbia
University President Lee C. Bollinger, with $1,411,894. The $2.8 million payday
for Suffolk University President David J. Sargent included: $436,000 in base
pay, a $436,000 longevity bonus, a deferred sabbatical bonus of $1.19 million,
$555,667 in deferred compensation, a performance bonus of $87,200 and $56,262
in health, dental and other benefits.
Leaders of public research universities
received a median salary and benefits of $427,400. Terry Hartle, senior vice
president of the American Council on Education, said the pay data included in
the survey were gathered months before the current economic crisis began.
Overall, salaries for presidents at smaller
private universities rose 6 percent, while those for presidents at private research
universities in 2007 remained steady at $527,000.
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