Houston Chronicle

More top schools pay leaders at least $1M

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More universiti­es are paying their presidents at least $1 million in annual compensati­on to try to retain top talent.

Seventeen presidents of public U.S. colleges reached that level in 2018, compared with 12 in fiscal 2016-17, according to a survey of public records by the Chronicle of Higher Education released Sunday.

Compensati­on is increasing as presidents are required to manage fiscal matters, raise funds and deal with sports teams and lawmakers in addition to more traditiona­l academic duties. Boards are creating more sophistica­ted pay packages based on meeting targets and creating incentives to stay, said Dan Bauman, the publicatio­n’s data reporter.

“They’re not just leading a college, but a health care system, dealing with athletics, dealing with donors, dealing with the legislatur­e,’’ said Bauman, who compiled the data. “You’re the public face of the university.”

With all the challenges, presidents are sticking around for shorter periods. The average tenure for college leaders fell to 6.5 years in 2016 from 8.5 years a decade prior, according to a 2017 survey conducted every five years by the American Council on Education.

The highest compensati­on in the survey went to William McRaven of the University of Texas System, with $2.6 million; Michael Young of Texas A&M University at College Station, with $1.9 million; and Eric Barron of Penn State University at University Park, with $1.8 million.

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