UPenn, Columbia, NYU presidents making millions

University presidents at UPenn, Columbia, NYU and other schools earn millions in annual compensation

The ongoing antisemitic protests at elite colleges and universities around the country amid the war between Israel and the terror group Hamas has roiled campuses as spring terms continue and graduation season nears.

Unauthorized encampments and other demonstrations have sprung up at many campuses around the country, with Fox News research finding that such protests have occurred at over half of the top 50 colleges in the country since April 17.

The campus unrest puts leaders of both public and private colleges in a challenging position, with some looking to address public safety needs and restore calm on campus to avoid escalating the situation – even as the unrest causes some university donors to reconsider their future support based on the college's response.

College presidents often earn well over $1 million annually in compensation, although those figures may vary based on the size and stature of the institution. Private institutions also disclose compensation differently than their public counterparts, and a report from The Chronicle of Higher Education (CHE) analyzed the highest paid private university presidents in 2021. 

Columbia University Protest\
Anti-Israel protests on college campuses have put university presidents to the test. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images / Getty Images)

EXPENSIVE COLUMBIA, YALE TUITION COMES WITH ANTI-ISRAEL PROTESTS

Here is a look at how much the highest paid private university presidents earned that year, per the Chronicle's report.
University of Pennsylvania
UPenn Amy Gutmann Joe Biden
A 2016 picture of UPenn President Amy Gutmann and then-Vice President Joe Biden as Biden launched his "cancer moonshot" initiative at the school. (d Hille/Philadelphia Inquirer/Tribune News Service via Getty Images / Getty Images)
Then-UPenn President Amy Gutmann earned nearly $22.9 million in 2021, according to the Chronicle's analysis. That featured about $1.6 million in base pay, plus a $1 million bonus with the more than $20 million remainder coming from deferred compensation and investment gains. 

When compared to corporate CEOs, Gutmann's compensation that year would have made her the 68th highest-paid CEO of a S&P 500 company in 2023, according to the Wall Street Journal's rankings. Gutmann departed UPenn in 2022 as the school's longest-serving president in history for an appointment as the U.S. ambassador to Germany in the Biden administration. 
UPenn currently has an interim president after Gutmann's successor, Liz Magill, stepped down from the role in December amid a controversy over her congressional testimony on antisemitism.
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY'S ANTISEMITISM CHAOS PROMPTS CALLS FOR TUITION REFUNDS
Columbia University

No comments:

Powered by Blogger.