Dayton Daily News

CSU gives president a three-year contract

School says financial package reflects new leader’s experience.

- By Ismail Turay Jr. Staff Writer

Jack Thomas is the first Central State president to have led another college, and the school is paying for that experience.

Jack Thomas is the first Central State University president to have previously led an institutio­n, and the school made an effort to compensate him based on his experience, Board Chairman

Mark Hatcher said.

Thomas, whose tenure started on July 1, will be paid at least $316,000 — including incentives — in his first year leading Ohio’s only public historical­ly Black college. The three-year contract is incentive-based.

“As Jack delivers and the institutio­n grows and improves and fundraisin­g occurs at levels that have never occurred at Central State before, you have to take care of people that do that,” Hatcher said.

Thomas’ base salary is $250,000 for the first year. He’s scheduled for a $25,000 raise each of his next two years, making his pay in the final year of the contract $300,000.

In addition, he will get annual housing and car allowances of $54,000 and $12,000, respective­ly. Both will be paid in monthly installmen­ts.

Thomas will also be reimbursed for business expenses, and he’ll be eligible for university offered health insurance and its retirement plan.

Like his predecesso­r Cynthia Jackson-Hammond, Thomas will not live in the president’s house on the CSU campus. The home is partially habitable, and it’s not suitable or big enough for the various events such as fundraiser­s that a university president would host at the residence, Hatcher said. Thomas and his wife are living in a Beavercree­k Twp. home. He is responsibl­e for any housing expenses that exceed the allowance, including the taxes, maintenanc­e, utilities and the like.

Thomas, who led Western Illinois University for eight years before resigning amid political and racial tension, likely would have received a higher base pay if he had taken a position at a larger institutio­n, Hatcher said. Therefore, Central State had to give him a competitiv­e salary. In his final year at Western Illinois, Thomas’ base pay was about $270,500 plus benefits.

Jackson-Hammond’s base pay in her last year as president was $269,000. She stepped down in June after eight years of leading the university.

Thomas, CSU’s ninth president, has the opportunit­y to earn annual bonuses if he achieves certain goals, which the board included in his contract. In his first year Thomas must:

■ Maintain regional and specialize­d program accreditat­ion.

■ Begin and complete a 2020-2023 strategic plan.

■ Begin and complete a marketing plan and timeline for implementa­tion.

■ Maintain retention rate in 2020-21 as establishe­d by the 2019-2020 baseline.

■ Raise $2 million with an emphasis on individual, corporate, foundation­s and institutio­nal donors.

The second year metrics will be determined by the board after Thomas completes the three-year strategic plan — the previous plan expired on June 30 — according to the contract.

The university has not included specific goals in past presidents’ contracts, Hatcher said. Jackson-Hammond was given goals, but they were not specific, nor were they embedded in her contract, Hatcher said.

However, including tangible metrics in the presidents’ contract is a relatively new concept in higher education, so the current board adopted that for Thomas, Hatcher said.

“We wanted (to include) things that are important to the institutio­n for its viability and sustainabi­lity,” Hatcher said. “But we also wanted them to be realistic and achievable.”

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