The Arizona Republic

Banner CEO’s $25.5 million tops nonprofit health groups

- Stephanie Innes

A debate over hiking the salary of Phoenix-based Valleywise Health CEO Steve Purves raises the question of what a nonprofit Arizona health system leader is paid these days. Generally, it’s a lot. Leading the earnings for executives leading nonprofit health systems in Arizona is Peter Fine, the CEO of Phoenix-based Banner Health.

Fine’s most recent salary data available, listed on Schedule J of the company’s IRS Form 990, shows he earned a total of $25.5 million in gross pay in 2017. That’s a significan­t leap from his prior year earnings of $8.7 million.

The increase was driven by a onetime executive retirement plan payment of $17 million, Banner officials said.

Fine’s base salary in 2017 was $1.3 million. His compensati­on was boosted by a bonus and incentives, deferred pay and a payment of $17 million from a Supplement­al Executive Retirement Plan — a program that was put in place early in Fine’s tenure, company spokeswoma­n Nancy Neff wrote in an email.

“If you subtract the one-time SERP payment, his annual compen

sation is very similar to 2016,” Neff wrote.

The Valleywise board on Tuesday voted 3-2 to hike Purves’ base pay to $685,000 from the current $600,000 beginning Friday. The five-year pay package for the public health system CEO includes a performanc­e bonus of up to 25% of his base salary (up to $171,250) and an added $68,500 retention bonus on Oct. 25, 2020.

The decision to increase Purves’ pay followed debate over whether his salary is too high for a public health system CEO.

Phoenix-based Intellimed, a health care analytics company, could not immediatel­y provide market share data for Arizona health systems. The Arizona Hospital and Healthcare Associatio­n’s most recent data says that for the 12 months ending in June 2018, Banner Health’s market share in Arizona was 32.9%.

The Valleywise market share, by comparison, was 2.3%. Market share data is based on patient discharges, associatio­n officials said.

Base salaries and bonuses aren’t the only compensati­on that CEOs receive.

The Republic looked at data from 2017 and, when it wasn’t available, from 2016, using IRS Forms 990 and, in the case of Valleywise Health, informatio­n obtained in a records request.

The following is the total gross compensati­on for top nonprofit health system CEOs in Arizona in 2017.

❚ 1. Peter Fine, Banner Health: $25.5 million

❚ 2. Linda Hunt, Dignity Health: $1.8 million

❚ 3. Thomas Sadvary, HonorHealt­h: $1.8 million (through 04/17 as CEO, plus work through the end of the year as adviser to the CEO and board of directors)

❚ 4. Dr. Wyatt Decker, CEO, Mayo Clinic in Arizona: $1.8 million

❚ 5. Judy Rich, TMC Healthcare (Tucson Medical Center): $1.7 million

❚ 6. Todd LaPorte, HonorHealt­h: $1.2 million (from 04/17 through the end of the year)

❚ *7. Robert Trenschel, Yuma Regional Medical Center: $1.1 million

❚ *8. Robert Thames, Northern Arizona Healthcare: $762,410

❚ 9. Steve Purves, Valleywise Health: $761,764.45 *Compensati­on is for 2016 Sources: 990 IRS forms via GuideStar, ProPublica’s Nonprofit Explorer and Valleywise Health. Not all the CEOs listed are still in those jobs.

Banner a leading health system

Banner Health is Arizona’s largest health system. It’s nonprofit, but it’s private. It is also one of the largest health systems in the country, with 52,000 employees across six states, 28 hospitals and a network of urgent care centers, clinics, outpatient surgery centers and retail pharmacies.

A compensati­on committee that’s part of the Banner Health board of directors works with an independen­t consulting firm to establish the president and CEO’s salary, Banner officials said.

Officials say the Banner committee then works with an independen­t compensati­on consulting firm that measures salary proposals against several benchmarks, including compensati­on paid by a peer group of comparable nonprofit health care systems.

Valleywise Health, formerly known as the Maricopa Integrated Health System, by comparison, is a nonprofit, public teaching health system that has earned a reputation for being a “safety net” that provides care for low income and underserve­d population­s.

Among its services, Valleywise operates the only American Burn Associatio­n-verified burn center in Arizona — one of 68 such centers nationwide. It is also one of the largest local providers of inpatient psychiatri­c beds.

Valleywise does not file Form 990s like other nonprofit organizati­ons. That’s because it functions like a government organizati­on — specifical­ly as a “political subdivisio­n” of the state. Under Arizona law it is a special taxing district, approved by voters in 2003 when the health system was in danger of shutting down, which is governed by a publicly elected board of directors.

At the time of the vote, Maricopa Medical Center was in danger of closing because of financial problems.

The 2003 vote authorized a tax that equates to $43.68 per year for a home assessed at $300,000 and brings in an estimated $76 million annually. In 2014, voters approved investing an additional $935 million for facility improvemen­ts at Valleywise. That added secondary property tax generates approximat­ely $42 million per year.

Another nonprofit health system with a similar market share to Valleywise is Northern Arizona Healthcare based in Flagstaff, which paid its thenCEO, Robert Thames, a base salary of $487,078 in 2016. Thomas’ total compensati­on that year was $762,410, which was almost the same as Purves’ total gross compensati­on for that same year.

In 2016, the most recently available 990 financial informatio­n shows Yuma Regional Medical Center CEO Robert Trenschel earned a base salary of $763,687 and total gross compensati­on of $1.1 million.

The 25 highest-paid not-for-profit health system executives nationwide received a combined 33.2% increase in total compensati­on in 2017, Modern Healthcare found in June. Banner Health’s Fine topped the publicatio­n’s list when ranked according to total gross compensati­on.

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