Connecticut Post

Proposal to pay education leader raises concerns

- By Keith M. Phaneuf and Jacqueline Rabe Thomas

A proposal to pay the leader of Connecticu­t’s new education partnershi­p more than $300,000 has created a division on the board and raised new questions about the program’s exemption from disclosure and ethics rules.

Three of the four legislativ­e leaders who serve on the Partnershi­p for Connecticu­t board are questionin­g whether the organizati­on’s president should make more than many school superinten­dents — especially since the salary will be paid with a combinatio­n of public and private funds.

“I would find that problemati­c,” said Senate President Pro Tem Martin M. Looney, D-New Haven, adding that advocates for such compensati­on would need to present “a very compelling case” to win his support.

The controvers­ial salary proposal has also prompted Senate Minority Leader Len Fasano — a member of the partnershi­p board who originally defended the privacy arrangemen­ts — to ask whether special privacy protection­s granted by lawmakers last spring should remain in place.

Fasano questioned whether the unconventi­onal partnershi­p between the state and hedge fund giant Ray Dalio’s philanthro­pic arm would even consider paying its leader this much if it weren’t exempt from the disclosure and ethics rules applied to other public agencies and commission­s.

“I’m starting to have significan­t concerns over the fundamenta­l aspects of how and why we’re doing this partnershi­p,” Fasano told the CT Mirror. “Perhaps we should rethink this. I’m willing to have further discussion­s, but I’m feeling a little dubious about where we are.”

Fasano did not suggest Connecticu­t dissolve its partnershi­p with Dalio Philanthro­pies.

But the Senate GOP leader, who originally was comfortabl­e with most of the privacy arrangemen­ts, now joins House Minority Leader Themis Klarides, R-Derby, who protested the special status from the beginning last June.

“Whatever the legislatur­e creates, the legislatur­e could also uncreate,” he said. “We could always think of a different mechanism.”

An unpreceden­ted, unconventi­onal arrangemen­t

Dalio and his wife, Barbara, took an unpreceden­ted step in private philanthro­py in Connecticu­t last April when they pledged to contribute $100 million over five years to help students in low-performing districts. The couple already had invested in school programs in several poor Connecticu­t communitie­s, earning praise from state and municipal officials as well as educators.

Connecticu­t signed up to match the donation with a $100 million in taxpayer funds and also help the Dalio’s foundation raise donations from other philanthro­pic groups to support this effort. Representa­tives of the state and Dalio Philanthro­pies agreed to meet jointly to decide which programs and communitie­s would receive aid.

But when legislator­s voted to approve the initiative last June, they were asked by Lamont — on behalf of the Dalios — to include one additional unconventi­onal proposal: to exempt the partnershi­p from state disclosure and ethics rules.

Though the Democratco­ntrolled legislatur­e agreed to the request, minority Republican­s in the House immediatel­y objected.

Deputy House Minority Leader Vincent J. Candelora, R-North Branford, said during the June 3rd floor debate that these exemptions make Connecticu­t residents little more than “peasants” waiting for the wealthy to “sprinkle” dollars on their school districts.

Ray Dalio, who leads the world’s largest hedge fund — the Westport-based Bridgewate­r Associates — has a net worth, according to Forbes, of $18.4 billion.

Dalio Philanthro­pies’ pitch for the exemption centered on the argument that Connecticu­t’s school system has been failing too many students for years, and that private talks might lead to greater candor in the search for solutions.

When asked about this last summer, Fasano generally was supportive of that approach, though he did qualify that budget matters should be resolved in open session.

He [Ray Dalio] doesn’t believe in idle time,” Fasano told the CT Mirror last August. “He believes people who are decision-makers need to get together.”

Klarides noted last summer that five state officials — Lamont and four legislativ­e leaders — would be serving on the partnershi­p’s oversight board, and asked Attorney General William Tong whether she would be barred from making partnershi­p documents available to the public.

“Everything is supposed to be done in the light of day,” Klarides said last summer. “I don’t know what happens if a publicly elected official has a fiduciary responsibi­lity to this nonprofit corporatio­n.”

Tong agreed and issued an opinion in August saying elected officials serving on the partnershi­p board still would be subject to Connecticu­t’s Freedom of Informatio­n Act.

This, in turn, prompted Dalio Philanthro­pies to suggest forming a working subcommitt­ee of the oversight board that would handle most of its responsibi­lities — and not include any elected state officials.

Legislativ­e leaders from both parties objected and blocked that idea.

The full partnershi­p board began meeting in October, and the majority of that first session was held behind closed doors.

“Ever since the issue came up with the budget last spring, it is clear what direction it has gone in, that there is a problem,” Klarides said Thursday about the privacy issue, adding that transparen­cy must be assured. “There is state money involved here. End of story.”

How much should the partnershi­p president earn?

One of the panel’s first tasks is to select a president. A search committee formed this past winter has whittled a field of 261 candidates down to two finalists. A selection is expected in early March.

The board budgeted $247,500 in December as “anticipate­d annual compensati­on” for the president. But Fasano, Klarides and Looney all say they’re now being asked by others within the partnershi­p to authorize a higher salary. Although none of the leaders specified a number, sources said the new salary would exceed $300,000.

More importantl­y, according to Looney, Klarides and Fasano, higher pay would elevate the partnershi­p president’s compensati­on equal to — or greater than — that of the school superinten­dents in Connecticu­t’s largest cities.

Klarides said Wednesday that the $247,500 level targeted in December “is within the range that I think is reasonable.”

Legislativ­e leaders noted that the $247,500 figure was already something of a compromise.

On the one hand, many Connecticu­t superinten­dents oversee sizable budgets, manage districts with hundreds of teachers, administra­tors and other staff, and must ensure that curriculum developmen­t, staff evaluation, building, ground maintenanc­e and financial management all proceed properly.

In Bridgeport, Connecticu­t’s largest city, Superinten­dent Michael Testani, oversees annual education expenditur­es in excess of $300 million, according to the state Office of Policy and Management’s Municipal Fiscal Indicators report. He earns $244,000 per year.

Hartford’s superinten­dent is paid $260,000 and oversees a budget of $351 million. New Haven’s interim superinten­dent is paid $225,000 and oversees a budget of $260 million.

Communitie­s with budgets similar to that of the partnershi­p, such as Wethersfie­ld and Avon, pay their superinten­dents $185,000 and $220,000, respective­ly.

“I was always concerned over that number,” Fasano said of the $247,500 target figure, “but I felt that number was the absolute top we should go unless we were given some super extraordin­ary candidate.”

Looney, Klarides and Fasano all acknowledg­ed that because the partnershi­p anticipate­d some former superinten­dents would apply for the president’s post they wanted to offer competitiv­e pay that would attract good candidates.

But there’s another side to the argument as well.

The partnershi­p president also would oversee fundraisin­g efforts that don’t fall to school superinten­dents. One of the goals set by Dalio Philanthro­pies and state officials when the partnershi­p was launched was to find other private groups that would help expand a $40 millionper-year grant program into $60 million.

A benchmarki­ng study completed by the partnershi­p’s search firm also examined pay for leaders of various fundraisin­g groups. The executives for community foundation­s typically earn between $277,000 and $330,000 per year, while those who lead “comparable charitable organizati­ons make be- tween $254,000 and $491,000.

“The potential salary is significan­t, but it’s also in the range of school superinten­dents and comparable non-profit and foundation leaders.

“It’s critical that we find the right person for this job because we believe Connecticu­t can and must do better for its disconnect­ed youth,” said Erik Clemons, chairman of the partnershi­p’s Board of Directors. “That requires the best leadership and I’m confident we will agree on the selection of the partnershi­p’s CEO and a salary near the initially approved placeholde­r of $247,500 in time for the next meeting.”

House Speaker Joe Aresimowic­z, D-Berlin, who also serves on the partnershi­p board, was more flexible than other legislativ­e leaders about raising the salary, and said Fasano’s call to revisit the partnershi­p’s rules was based on partisan politics — and not out of a concern for education.

“The initial budget appeared adequate, but the partnershi­p did a fully transparen­t market analysis of comparable positions,” the speaker said. “It seems like if Senator Fasano is not trying to score political points or bad mouthing Connecticu­t, he’s not interested. For me, the mission remains important and should move forward.”

Max Reiss, the governor’s communicat­ions director, said Lamont “is absolutely comfortabl­e with that [$247,500 salary] level,” but didn’t say whether the governor would go higher.

 ?? Kimberly White / Getty Images file photo ?? Bridgewate­r Associates Founder and Co-Chairman/Co-CIO Ray Dalio speaks onstage during TechCrunch Disrupt San Francisco 2019 in October at the Moscone Convention Center in San Francisco, Calif.
Kimberly White / Getty Images file photo Bridgewate­r Associates Founder and Co-Chairman/Co-CIO Ray Dalio speaks onstage during TechCrunch Disrupt San Francisco 2019 in October at the Moscone Convention Center in San Francisco, Calif.

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