Your feedback ensures we stay focused on the facts that matter to you most—take our survey.
Green Bay Area School District employee salaries, 2009-2011
This article may not adhere to Ballotpedia's current article guidelines. Please email us at editor@ballotpedia.org to suggest an improvement.
Green Bay Area School District employee salaries are public records under the Wisconsin Open Records Law.
Salaries
In the 2010-2011 annual budget provided by Green Bay Area Public Schools, salaries accounted for $129,019,359 (55.4%) of the total budget and benefits accounted for $64,696,010 (27.8%) of the total budget. The total operating budget for 2010-2011 was $233,092,461.[1]
The district expected 70 staff, including teachers, counselors, social workers and administrators, to retire on January 20, 2012.[2]
Year | Operating budget |
---|---|
FY 2009-10 (actual) | $238,859,193 |
FY 2010-11 (adopted) | $244,237,901 |
Salary information
A searchable database provided by DataMine provides access to Wisconsin teacher salaries from various counties and districts and is searchable by name.[3] Of the 103 positions listed, one position receives over $150,000 and twenty-four positions receive over $100,000 annually.[4]
Title | Degree | School | Salary |
---|---|---|---|
Superintendent | N/A | N/A | $186,000 |
Assistant Superintendent | N/A | N/A | $123,524 |
Assistant Superintendent | N/A | N/A | $116,113 |
Assistant Superintendent | N/A | N/A | $123,524 |
Associate Director | N/A | N/A | $99,607 |
Coordinator Attendance | N/A | N/A | $41,058 |
Principal | 6-year Specialist’s degree | Elementary school | $90,261 |
Assistant Principal | Master’s degree | High school | $92,896 |
Principal | Master’s degree | Elementary | $83,040 |
School Psychologist | N/A | Elementary | $62,675 |
Teacher | Bachelor’s | Elementary school | $44,215* |
Teacher | Bachelor’s | High school | $45,225* |
Teacher | Master’s | Elementary school | $61,185* |
Teacher | Master’s | High school | $57,195* |
(*) Salary numbers represent random selections from a vast database. High volumes of data prevent determining averages and make all-inclusive lists difficult to produce.
Top 10 highest paid workers
Top ten school administrator salaries, provided by The Green Bay Press Gazette:[5]
Title | Annual salary (maximum) |
---|---|
Superintendent | $186,000 |
Assistant Superintendent | $123,524 |
Assistant Superintendent | $123,524 |
Assistant Superintendent | $116,113 |
Executive Director | $113,705* |
Principal (High School) | $110,428* |
Executive Director | $110,428** |
Executive Director, Southwest | $109,157 |
Associate Principal | $108,263 |
Principal (Middle school) | $108,263 |
(*)Two additional similar positions receive the same salary. (**) One additional similar position receives the same salary.
Projected pension cost
The Green Bay Area School District agreement between the Board of Education of the Green Bay Area School District and the Green Bay Education Association (modified April 21, 2010) provides cursory information regarding benefits.[6]
Districts with updated teacher contracts - July 2011[7]
District | Health contribution | Pension contribution | Projected savings |
---|---|---|---|
Green Bay | 12.60% | 5.80% | $11,000,000 |
Ripon | 12.0% | 5.80% | $600,000 |
Eau Claire | 12.60% | 5.80% | $3,500,000 |
Columbus | 12.60% | 5.80% | $375,000 |
Madison | up to 5% in 2011-12 and 10% in 2012-13 | 5.80% | $15,500,000 |
Racine | Switch to high deductible plan | 5.80% | $19,200,000 |
Sheboygan | 12.60% | 5.80% | $6,600,000 |
Wausau | 15.0% | 5.80% | $3,354,900 |
Kaukauna | 12.60% | 5.80% | $1,900,000 |
With the passage of Act 10 in Wisconsin, public employees are required to pay an increased percentage of earnings towards health care and pension, usually about one-half of the Wisconsin Retirement System's required contributions.[8] Though the plan was still in the beginning phases of implementation in 2011, the results have led to a projected $154 million in savings to offset Wisconsin state and school district debt.[9]
Salary records project
In 2011, Sunshine Review chose 152 local governments as the focus of research on public employee salaries. The editors of Sunshine Review selected eight states with relevant political contexts (listed alphabetically):
1. California
2. Florida
3. Illinois
4. Michigan
5. New Jersey
6. Pennsylvania
7. Texas
8. Wisconsin
Within these states, the editors of Sunshine Review focused on the most populous cities, counties and school districts, as well as the emergency services entities within these governments. The purpose of this selection method was to develop articles on governments affecting the most citizens.
The salary information garnered from these states were a combination of existing online resources and state Freedom of Information Act requests sent out to the governments.
A study published by the Pew Charitable Trusts and the Economy League of Greater Philadelphia said the city of Philadelphia faced challenges owing to the cost of public employee pensions.[10] The report claimed the amount that Philadelphia paid to pension recipients limited the city’s ability to use its budget effectively.
The report said there were more individuals receiving pension benefits—33,907 claimants in 2006—than workers in the city—28,701.[10] The authors recommended three steps towards addressing the problem of high costs in pensions: improved data collection, expanded transparency initiatives, and reductions to the city's overall budget.[10]
Salary schedules can be published as ranges, not as specific compensation figures, and may leave out compensation received through health and retirement benefits, as well as benefits such as commuter allowances and cell phone reimbursements. This project aimed to close the gap and provide a more accurate picture of public employee salaries for the sake of public education and transparency.
See also
External links
Footnotes
- ↑ Salaries and benefits, generally
- ↑ Retiring employees
- ↑ DataMine Wisconsin teachers’ salary database (dead link)
- ↑ Compensation $100-150k
- ↑ School Administrator Salaries
- ↑ Tentative Agreement2.pdf Teacher contract
- ↑ Projected savings through health and pension contribution reform
- ↑ Wisconsin Act 10
- ↑ Projected $154 million savings
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 10.2 '’Philadelphia’s Quiet Crisis: The Rising Cost of Employee Benefits, Pew Charitable Trusts and the Economy League of Greater Philadelphia, January 23, 2008