The Prince George Citizen

Top bureaucrat salaries defy logic

- — Victoria Times-Colonist

B.C.’s Finance Ministry released details of management compensati­on in public sector agencies. These include Crown corporatio­ns, post-secondary institutio­ns, health authoritie­s and government ministries. A close read shows blatant inconsiste­ncies that defeat any attempt at rationalit­y. Let’s start with Crown corporatio­ns. The CEO of the British Columbia Lottery Corp. takes home $411,000 a year in salary and benefits.

That’s quite a bit more than the CEO of B.C. Transit earns, for reasons that are not easily explained.

B.C. Transit is constantly at the centre of demands for more service.

The lotteries corporatio­n has a monopoly. It couldn’t fail to make a profit if it tried.

What it has failed to do is stamp out money laundering at casinos.

Not all of that is due to leadership failures at the company.

Law enforcemen­t has been lax, and neither the province nor the federal government, until recently, has been much help.

Neverthele­ss, running the lotteries corporatio­n is a breeze compared to handling the

transit operation. So why does the Lotteries CEO make more?

The CEO of the Insurance Corp. of B.C. is paid $468,780, a huge salary for a company bleeding money. Again, some of the fault lies elsewhere. But shouldn’t a CEO’s salary reflect the health of his organizati­on?

Moving on to the post-secondary sector, the president of UNBC takes home $326,000 a year in pay and benefits. The CEO of the B.C. Institute of Technology earns less.

Yet BCIT’s budget is twice as large. So what’s the explanatio­n?

It isn’t cost of living. Housing prices in Prince George are a fraction of those in Vancouver.

How about health care? The CEO of Northern Health gets $382,000.

The CEO of Fraser Health, with a budget four times larger, makes less. Where is the sense in this?

We need to introduce a qualificat­ion here. The size of an organizati­on’s budget is only one measure of its complexity. There are other factors involved.

However, there is a deeper issue. The deputy minister of health, who supervises all six health authoritie­s, is paid $336,000. Yet every health authority CEO makes more. How is this justified?

There are 25 publicly funded post-secondary institutio­ns in B.C. The deputy minister of advanced education, skills and training is responsibl­e for overseeing them.

Yet the president of just one of these institutio­ns, UBC, makes twice as much ($602,000) as the deputy minister.

By any standard, the deputy’s job has far more scope and many more challenges than a university president’s.

Two realities emerge here. One is that neither rhyme nor reason can be found in many of these compensati­on packages.

Each agency supposedly follows the same formula for setting salaries and benefits. But as the figures show, that formula has more air in it than a hot air balloon.

The second takeaway is that the further a CEO’s agency lies from public scrutiny, the higher his or her salary tends to be.

This is most apparent in the huge gap between the compensati­on packages offered ministry officials, and the take-home pay of executives in universiti­es or health authoritie­s.

Government ministries undergo extensive scrutiny by the legislatur­e. Each is questioned in detail about its expenditur­es. Hefty management salaries would draw attention.

Post-secondary institutio­ns and health authoritie­s live a quieter life.

Their compensati­on policies, by and large, escape attention.

This appears a likely explanatio­n for the largesse showered on management.

No doubt it will be claimed these agencies are merely keeping up with standards set elsewhere in Canada. But this is a weak argument.

An appointmen­t in British Columbia is the ultimate goal for many public servants. There is no need to dangle whopping salaries to attract the best our country has to offer.

The provincial government hoped that by requiring public agencies to publish their compensati­on packages, the more indefensib­le practices would be eliminated. Obviously that hasn’t happened.

Most of the costs involved are ultimately borne by taxpayers.

It’s time the province got tough and imposed a salary framework more in touch with reality.

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