College district raises tainted by controversy
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Amy R. Spurgeon
COSTA MESA -- While most college district employees say they are
satisfied with a recently approved 3.5% salary increase, a small
controversy is brewing over whether the district’s chancellor should have
been included.
“He took advantage of the blanket 3.5% increase,” said Michael Leigh, a
professor at OCC for 25 years. “It’s a bad symbol for the underpaid
teachers and staff. It’s disappointing. But it’s not just the chancellor.
The board allowed it to happen.”
The controversy over William M. Vega’s raise, which boosted his salary to
more than $155,000, stems from an employment contract the chancellor
signed last year.
According to the terms of the contract, Vega was given an 8.25% increase
in 1999, raising his salary from $138,570 to $150,000.
District board president Jerry Patterson insists the language in that new
contract was written to exclude the chancellor from across-the-board
increases in the future.
In fact, Vega’s new contract omitted a long-standing clause that would
have guaranteed he receive “the same percentage increase of salary as is
received by other members of the district’s certificated management.”
Vega could not be reached for comment.
The board voted 4-1 to include Vega in the 2000-01 cost-of-living increase. Patterson dissented, saying administrators have individually
negotiated contracts, which should not be tied to salary increases
negotiated by employee unions.
“I don’t think it’s proper for the management negotiating the salaries to
get it themselves,” Patterson said. “He got a substantial pay raise last
time and the faculty did not.”
But board member Paul Berger defended Vega’s pay raise.
“I wanted to include him,” he said, acknowledging that faculty members
might be upset over the issue.
Berger said the belief that Vega’s current contract omits him from
across-the-board raises, “is a matter of interpretation.”
Paul Jordan, executive director of the district’s teachers union,
applauded Patterson’s actions Wednesday.
“He was taking a stance,” Jordan said. “I think he took the right
position. In view of the 8.25% Vega got a year ago, I think many faculty
members will find this insulting.”
John Renley, vice chancellor of human resources, said Vega’s salary ranks
among the top three in the county compared to other chancellors of
community college districts.
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