Chicago Sun-Times

Huge buyouts sock it to taxpayers

- MADELEINE DOUBEK

Atop public official in Illinois underperfo­rms or, sometimes, even gets caught misbehavin­g and what do we do? Too often, the answer has been to give them a six- figure, padded landing. It’s time to stop that nonsense once and for all.

The Better Government Associatio­n recently took a look at hefty public severance deals and found no fewer than nine instances of public bodies granting severance packages to top- level executives that added up to more than $ 5 million of taxpayermo­ney.

In a few cases, university administra­tors misbehaved and were removed fromtheir posts, but they still were granted paid sabbatical­s or tenured positions worth hundreds of thousands of dollars. And if we’re allowing a former administra­tor to keep a tenured teaching position, we’re giving that person a job and a pension for life that will keep costing us.

Michael Hogan, a former University of Illinois president at UrbanaCham­paign, resigned after it was discovered his chief of staff posed as amember of the university’s legislativ­e body to try to influence a debate. He was paid $ 67,500 to end his contract. He also got a one- year paid sabbatical worth $ 285,000 and a teaching post with an annual salary of $ 285,000.

Richard Herman, a former chancellor at the U. of I., resigned in the midst of an admissions scandal eight years ago. He got a sabbatical worth $ 244,000 and a job as special assistant to the interim president with a salary of $ 395,000.

Just four years ago, former chancellor PhyllisWis­e, of the U. of I., resigned as documents were released suggesting she hid informatio­n from the public, likely violating the state’s Freedom of Informatio­n Act. But she got a $ 365,000 sabbatical and a tenured teaching post with a salary of nearly $ 300,000. She left earlier this year for a Colorado job.

The good news is that state lawmakers have passed laws limiting severance packages and boosting transparen­cy for these sorts of deals at public universiti­es and community colleges. HB3593 and SB2159 limited severance to a year’s salary, limited contracts to four years and required public notice before a contract was extended or amended. That’s great, but it applies only to certain positions in certain public institutio­ns and there’s no specific restrictio­n on sabbatical­s and teaching positions.

Neither of those bills covers severance deals for other government jobs like village managers or county executives, or top jobs at special agencies likeMetra or the water reclamatio­n district.

No one suggested formerMetr­a CEO Alex Clifford had done anything wrong, but he resigned and had his contract bought out, got a promise of making up any salary difference between his current job and his next one, moving expenses, and payment for pension and medical coverage contributi­ons for a grand total that was valued at more than $ 650,000. There was uproar at the time, but it’s since faded away.

This is taxpayer money. Why not stop the golden parachutes at all levels once and for all?

State Sen. Tom Cullerton, a suburban Democrat who worked on previous legislatio­n after a severance controvers­y at the College of DuPage, said he hears the argument that buyouts need to be generous to attract top talent who could go elsewhere, but he calls that “foolish.”

He said he understand­s some executives­might lose their jobs simply because they don’t get along with a new mayor or president or boardmajor­ity, and those jobs deserve “at least aminimal amount of protection,” perhaps a year’s salary that the public is aware of before it’s granted.

“There’s no need for these huge buyouts at the end,” Cullerton said. “That’s your money andmy money.”

State Sen. Bill Cunningham, a Chicago Democrat who is vice chair of the Senate’s Higher Education Committee and sponsor of the law just enacted that restricts payouts for college presidents and chancellor­s, agreesmore can be done.

“I think we put some speed bumps in place, some pretty high ones,” Cunningham said of the law that applies to top college executives. “I think the same model we’ve put in place for universiti­es and colleges can also be applied anywhere where they enter into contractua­l employment agreements. I think that’s worth looking at.”

“When a severance payment is made, something went wrong,” Cunningham said. “Taxpayers shouldn’t have to fork over a ton of money.”

California passed a law restrictin­g school superinten­dents’ severance to 12months’ pay. Florida went even further, passing a law that limits severance for any public “officer, agent, employee, or contractor” to no more than five months’ salary.

Let’s follow Florida’s lead. Let’s stop all the eye- popping, six- figure severances, paid sabbatical­s, tenured positions and other giveaways, too.

If you’re leading or managing a government, you should be paid well and competitiv­ely. If you’re being asked to leave, then no more gilded parachutes. It’s time to end the cushy landings.

 ?? | DAVID MERCER/ AP ?? Former University of Illinois President Michael Hogan.
| DAVID MERCER/ AP Former University of Illinois President Michael Hogan.
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