Uh Oh, Guess Who Is Going To Ask For a Raise?

I'm thinking that, in less than a year from now, Superintendent Brent Jones is gonna be asking for a raise. I believe this because of two things.

One, he cleverly got a two-year contract from the Board which is NOT the norm for SPS or most districts in general. He could have done this so that he could cut and run if this job really didn't suit him (but he would only get part of his salary if he left on his own).  I do have my suspicions that he may just be a placeholder for someone else (like former Garfield High School principal, Ted Howard). 

Two, just take a look at this list of Washington State Superintendents and their salaries - it's breathtaking. And Jones isn't even on this list which is a bit puzzling because he's making $335,000, just in salary. If he was on this list, he would be fourth from the bottom.

The guy at the top - Kevin McKay - oversees a district of EIGHT schools. For over half a million dollars per year. 

The next person, Michelle Reid, oversee 36 schools and 22,000 students. For just under half a million dollars per year. 

So if you were overseeing 100 schools plus and about 50K students, wouldn't you look at this list and expect more money? 

Of course, the question would be, from where? Allegedly, there is NO money. 

It will be interesting watching this unfold just as the district will start closing schools. But maybe "well-resourced schools" need a well-resourced superintendent. 

Comments

Yep said…
Thanks for highlighting these outrageous superintendent salaries- especially Sunnyside!

Discussions about education not being fully funded need to be slowed down until we see some real leadership and changes around fiscal responsibility.
Amanda F said…
Those salaries are truly eye-popping. My husband is a doctor in a specialist field (so better paid on average than generalist doctors.) And still his colleagues don't make as much as the ones at the top of this list, working a full-time doctor job. These salaries are more in line with what an administrator would make at Swedish, not a doctor, which tells you something about the perceived value of practitioners vs. administrators.
Anonymous said…
Are these numbers base only or with full benefits either way just WOW Hey tax payer funded public schools BUSTED again stop crying poor.

Split now
Anonymous said…
Except SPS is failing when it comes to financial stability , student outcomes, student safety and community approval. The new board should fire the current clown and go rudderless for 2 years Lets see if the position is even necessary.

New board
Anonymous said…
We know that Jones is "making $335,000, just in salary" because salary amounts are public information. On the other hand, his travelling, meetings, and whatever the Board doesn't rein in will be also charged to the district, but those will be tax-free dollars to him.

Anyways, regarding Amanda F's comment, I am aware that medical doctors with specialties have gone through high-quality education & training. No online degrees will cut it, unlike in Education degrees. And they don't have summer months off. And they are required to perform tasks with complete transparency. No word salad to merely kill time will cut it. The patients' outcomes are tracked with objectively. Then, I wonder why so much of our tax dollars are spent on any superintendent's salaries at unremarkable public schools.

That said, the superintendent's job must be vetted by the Board in a transparent process, right? Who would spend $2-4 millions without complete research and vetting. Yup, that's Brent Jones for SPS.

Big Steal
Anonymous said…
@split now

I have direct knowledge of salary data reported for non-school employees and can say with a fair degree of certainty that the sums reported DO NOT include benefits. The number is salary (or hourly wages) only for that year.

-One More Eckstein Parent
Patrick said…
On the one hand, sure, that's a lot of money. But on the other hand, if SPS were a private sector company taking in a billion $ a year the CEO would be making even more. Our society in general richly rewards people at the top, rather than the people who do the hands-on work.
Anonymous said…
If SPS were a publicly traded company the CEO would have been fired long ago and that billion you mentioned would be cut in half. I cant find a single positive metric for SPS can you? Can SPS even run without the charity of the PTA and other groups?

Reality suxs
Bubba said…
I agree with Patrick. Also, the top 3 are all payouts, and look at the turnover and vacancies across time and districts. To take this outdated and misrepresented data and create a narrative about Seattle’s superintendent is stretch.
Patrick, but of course those in private industry make more. Public education is not a business. It needs to be well-run and well-managed, for sure, but it's not a business.

Reality suss, I have always said if all the PTAs/PTOS walked away for a week/month, those in JSCEE would feel it and certainly hear from principals. And if those PTAs/PTOS used the money they raised in a year SOLELY for student enrichment, I'm pretty sure the district would notice that as well.

Bubba, it's data from 2021. That's not outdated. Okay so some of those include a payoff but the data stands; those superintendents are making good money.

I invite you to watch and see what plays out with Superintendent Jones.
Patrick said…
Melissa, education is not a business, but the same factors that make high private sector CEO salaries also affect schools. There aren't that many people who are qualified, and it's an enormous job that many people wouldn't want to do even if they could.

There's plenty of problems with the school district but the superintendent's pay isn't near the top of the list to me.

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