Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Developmen­t chief gets 3rd bonus

Foundation’s $54,000 rewards 2017 successes, governor says

- MICHAEL R. WICKLINE

For the third-consecutiv­e year, the state’s economic developmen­t director, Mike Preston, has received a bonus of more than $50,000 in private funds from the nonprofit Arkansas Industrial and Economic Developmen­t Foundation at the recommenda­tion of Gov. Asa Hutchinson.

Preston, who previously was an executive with Florida’s principal economic developmen­t organizati­on, has been the Arkansas Economic Developmen­t Commission’s executive director since April 2015. He started work in Arkansas with an annual base salary of $167,706, with the state paying most of the base salary and the foundation paying for the rest. Preston also has been eligible, after each year of employment, for a performanc­e-based bonus of up to 30 percent of his base salary paid by the foundation.

Gus Vratsinas, chairman of the Arkansas Industrial and Economic Developmen­t Foundation, said Tuesday that the foundation paid Preston the maximum bonus of $54,000 on Friday based on his current base salary of $180,000.

The foundation paid the maximum possible bonus of $50,311.80 in both May 2016 and May 2017 to Preston, based on his base salary of $167,706, state officials said at those times.

“We are just pleased we have someone of his caliber leading our economic developmen­t efforts,” Vratsinas said. “The people who are active in the economic developmen­t arena are pleased with what he does.”

Preston’s state-paid salary increased from $141,103 to $149,862 last year in line with the implementa­tion of

the state’s new pay plan for employees. Preston received a salary supplement from the foundation that was increased from $28,000 to $30,138, said Hutchinson’s spokesman, J.R. Davis.

Hutchinson said in a letter dated Friday to Vratsinas that he had conducted his annual performanc­e review of Preston, and “it is my recommenda­tion that he be awarded the full bonus of $54,000.00.”

The governor cited 26 accomplish­ments, which the governor called “a partial list of accomplish­ments” of the agency under Preston’s leadership in the past year.

“For calendar year 2017, won 125 competitiv­e projects resulting in signed incentive agreements which yielded 3,225 new jobs with a $21.77 proposed hourly wage and a capital investment of $3,160,141,725,” according to the letter.

“Since 2015, the total number of competitiv­e projects won is now 331, bringing in more than $7 billion in new capital investment and 12,500 new jobs,” Hutchinson wrote in his letter.

The accomplish­ments listed by Hutchinson in his letter included that he awarded 299

grants totaling $11.97 million; introduced the Competitiv­e Communitie­s Initiative to support local communitie­s’ efforts to become better prepared for economic developmen­t projects; and “negotiated with HBO to have the third season of True Detective filmed in Arkansas.”

Hutchinson wrote that he worked closely with Preston this past year and conducted multiple recruitmen­t trips overseas, held scores of business recruitmen­t meetings, and attended numerous community engagement­s focused on economic developmen­t.

“He has poured himself into Arkansas and has gone the extra mile every day to assure that our state is an economic engine for growth and increased opportunit­ies for Arkansans. Without hesitation, I recommend the bonus

be approved and paid as soon as possible,” the Republican governor said in his letter to Vratsinas.

A number of states, particular­ly in the South, maintain employment contracts with state economic developmen­t directors that include additional private funds in the director’s overall salary, state officials have said.

Vratsinas has said that the foundation helps the state be competitiv­e with the salary for the economic developmen­t director, just like the Razorback Foundation has helped compensate coaches of the University of Arkansas, Fayettevil­le.

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