Tough to live on a 100k pension? Only a liberal like you would say that. Unless you live in NYC, 100k is a lot of money for a retiree whose house is most likely paid off and have no large expenses like a middle class family would have.
You can most definitely live on 100k a year in the most expensive suburbs of the SF bay area if you had an easy job with the government for 30 years and a paid off house. Why should the taxpayers fund lavish lifestyles of public retirees?
Out of the 342,543 searchable retirees, 1,378 collect annual pensions exceeding $100,000, and 68 receive over $150,000
I can just smell the jealousy from here. None of you has the education, experience or training to do their job and are simply jealous. Those salaries and pensions are quite normal for almost any top administrator for a good sized county/district.
If you think it is such good money and benefits (and it certainly is) then go get your masters, teach for 10 years, move into admin at the bottom, build up 20+ years of experience more, get your doctorate and apply! Oh, and you'll have to beat out all the other qualified candidates.
They are normally employees of the county school system and paid by county property taxes. There are some state and federal funds that go to them however.
Why do you think rich counties/areas tend to have the best schools? They have the most money and best administrators (because they can afford top talent by paying high salaries).
A search for a good superintendent is like an executive search for a CEO. They recruit them nationally. And like a CEO, they have very broad reaching experience and responsibility. That's why they are paid so well.
Gawd, you're a dumb ass. Please try, again.
1,378 divided by 342,543 = ???
Less than one half of one half of a percent make $100k/year or more in retirement (and, of course, you are incapable of acknowledging that for decades the individuals in question paid into the system with their own funds).
When you need a fireman, paramedic, teacher or cop, or the need to utilize any local or state service agency, feel free to express your opinion on their pension.
Surprisingly, in spite of your douchery, in 99% of cases they will treat you with respect and deference.
Lucky you.
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They are normally employees of the county school system and paid by county property taxes. There are some state and federal funds that go to them however.
Why do you think rich counties/areas tend to have the best schools? They have the most money and best administrators (because they can afford top talent by paying high salaries).
A search for a good superintendent is like an executive search for a CEO. They recruit them nationally. And like a CEO, they have very broad reaching experience and responsibility. That's why they are paid so well.
I can just smell the jealousy from here. None of you has the education, experience or training to do their job and are simply jealous. Those salaries and pensions are quite normal for almost any top administrator for a good sized county/district.
If you think it is such good money and benefits (and it certainly is) then go get your masters, teach for 10 years, move into admin at the bottom, build up 20+ years of experience more, get your doctorate and apply! Oh, and you'll have to beat out all the other qualified candidates.
No like a CEO they stack the board with friends to extract as much money as possible from Shareholders and revenue. Just replace board with politician and Shareholders and revenue with tax payers and you have .gov.
Once she's got 30 years she gets FULL salary as pension.
Not really. My wife is on the superintendent track because she's highly educated, hard working and very good at what she does. They're actively grooming her for it.
We plan to retire by 50. Once she's got 30 years she gets FULL salary as pension.
Not really. My wife is on the superintendent track because she's highly educated, hard working and very good at what she does. They're actively grooming her for it.
We plan to retire by 50. Once she's got 30 years she gets FULL salary as pension.
And that's ridiculous. Paying someone the for not working the same amount that they made while working is unsustainable.
I understand that his wife is in that field and he wants to support her, but maybe he should just recuse himself from this conversation rather than argue the point because it is obviously and completely unsustainable probably even in the best of times, not even mentioning the shitstorm economy we have now with tax revenues plummetting faster than Dave McOwen's latest investment.
I'm sure she is. Good for you. My wife teaches nursing students and may get 80% too someday but anyone looking at this objectively sees it's not a free market, there is some extortion going on, and it's unsustainable. (PS don't bank on it)
I understand that his wife is in that field and he wants to support her, but maybe he should just recuse himself from this conversation rather than argue the point because it is obviously and completely unsustainable probably even in the best of times, not even mentioning the shitstorm economy we have now with tax revenues plummetting faster than Dave McOwen's latest investment.
We could do it if we had a vibrant private economy pretty easy since it would only be a small percentage of that. At one time private industry employed 90% of our citizens. Today government 'employs' over 70%. e.g. 22 million govt employees, over 40 million families are now dependent on food stamps to eat....50 million dependent on social security...35 million on welfare......over 15 million on unemployment, etc.
Correct, but don't mention that in ATPN, because government is a solution for everything according to many here.
The guy signed the contract so he should get it. They should not be negotiating contracts like this in the future, however.
Whats the problem here? The state made promises to pay and spent the money they should have had saved for this obligation and now people are complaining the pensions are too high? Fuck that.
I wonder what the average big city superintendent made in 1940, adjusted for inflation? Back when U.S. public schools produced a good product.