Several top-level executives at the University of Hawaii received double-digit percent pay increases this year based on that allows UH president David Lassner to make 鈥渁dditional special adjustments鈥 to make sure they don’t go elsewhere and to account for new job duties.
, which bring four UH vice-presidents and the general counsel to a salary of $272,040, reflect pay increases ranging from 6.1% in the case of Donald Straney, VP for academic affairs, up to 14.1%, in the case of Garret Yoshimi, VP for information technology.
The other substantial pay increases affect the VP for administration Jan Gouveia (12%); VP for budget and finance Kalbert Young (10.8%); and general counsel Carrie Okinaga (11.2%).
鈥淚f tuition (revenue from lower enrollment) is down, then where are we getting the money to pay for this?鈥 asked Sen. Donna Mercado Kim, chair of the Senate Higher Education Committee.
鈥淲hen you鈥檙e looking at the overall performance of these top-level people, you have to judge performance on the overall success of the university,鈥 she added.
Annual salary increases for executive and managerial personnel at University of Hawaii are standard, and based on performance. Senior officials are entitled to an increase in their base salary of $1,800, plus an additional increase of 1% to 1.5% depending on whether they achieve a rating of 鈥渆xceeds expectations鈥 or 鈥渆xceptional,鈥 according to UH spokesman Dan Meisenzahl.
But the policy exception, which to the UH Board of Regents during an Oct. 3 committee meeting, allows those pay increases to soar even higher to retain top staffers and account for new duties.
鈥淚t was under this discretion that five vice presidents received their pay increases that bring each to the same pay level. They were all evaluated by the president as exceptional,鈥 Meisenzahl said in an email.
The new salaries, which will take effect November 1 and are not subject to approval by the , were attached to an agenda ahead of Thursday鈥檚 next general meeting.
The Board of Regents, the governing body of the UH system, has authority to sign off on salary adjustments for only three executive positions: the university president, the board of regents鈥 executive director and internal auditor.
Lassner鈥檚 salary went from $375,000 last year to $395,004 this year, an increase of 5%. Kendra Oishi, the executive director, went from $110,040 to $114,096, an increase of 3.7%, and Glenn Shizumura, the auditor, from $157,404 to $162,168, a 3% change.
The VP salary increases, which far exceed the average, are drawing ire from some of Hawaii鈥檚 top lawmakers at a time of declining enrollment across the UH system.
UH this week announced a 鈥 marking a drop for the ninth year in a row of falling numbers. The campus system, which includes three universities and seven community colleges across the state, has seen its enrollment drop from 60,000 a decade ago to 49,977 this year.
Kim said she plans to deliver a letter to the Board of Regents signed by herself and some of her colleagues asking for additional information on the methodology for calculating the salary increases by Oct. 28.
The funding for UH executive-level pay increases is drawn from a yearly legislative appropriation tied to the with Unit 7 of the University of Hawaii Professional Assembly for all other UH employees. Effective July 1, all UH faculty received a 2% base pay adjustment.
This year, $1.1 million was set aside in the appropriation for executive level increases, according to Meisenzahl.
The president鈥檚 determination on who got a special boost in salary was based on the expansion of their scope of duties and a need to retain high-level individuals, the spokesman said.
Meisenzahl added that some of the individuals 鈥渢urned down鈥 pay increases in previous years and that their 鈥渞esponsibilities have grown substantially.鈥
For instance, VP Kal Young has added 鈥減ublic-private partnerships and government relations鈥 to his budget and finance duties while Okinaga, the general counsel, has 鈥渟aved millions in costs by eliminating the use of outside counsel,鈥 he wrote.
鈥淭he vice presidents are acknowledged as highly effective and often sought after by others,鈥 Meisenzahl said. 鈥淭hey are part of the team that has turned UH around.鈥
The $272,040 salary for these managers falls roughly in line or below similarly placed executives at other higher-ed research institutions, according to a by the College and University Professional Association.
Median pay for a chief academic affairs officer is $390,150, while for a chief legal affairs officer it is $270,000 and for a chief financial officer, $284,580.
Not all of the UH vice presidents received quite the same level of pay adjustment: Vassilis Syrmos, the UH VP for research and innovation, got a 2.7% pay increase, from $256,452 to $263,385.
Syrmos oversees UH鈥檚 research support division, including the management of planned construction of a telescope atop Mauna Kea, which is delayed by .
鈥 Reporter Blaze Lovell contributed to this story.
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