Journalism students launch University of Alaska salary database
by Jeff Richardson / jrichardson@newsminer.com
Jan 22, 2012 | 13507 views | 34 34 comments | 33 33 recommendations | email to a friend | print
FAIRBANKS — Student journalists have launched a searchable database of University of Alaska employee salaries, a move they say is designed to add transparency to campus spending while student tuition swells.

The effort, led by the Sun Star student newspaper at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, allows the public to search for UA employee salaries by name, pay range and campus location. The database is available at www.uafsunstar.com/salary/index.php.

Sun Star editor-in-chief Heather Bryant said it’s part of an effort to spotlight where campus dollars are spent.

She said it’s a particularly relevant discussion because of rapidly rising tuition rates. Tuition rates at UA have doubled since 2001, and a 7 percent increase for undergraduate tuition is planned for the 2012 to 2013 school year.

The database shows an employee’s name, title, department, job status, salary and hire date. Bryant said some other information that could be relevant, such as an employee’s academic credentials, wasn’t available through the records search.

According to the newspaper, $289 million was spent on base salaries for 6,546 positions at UA last fiscal year. The overall UA budget is about $820 million.

A database containing the salaries of public employees isn’t a new idea. The Alaska Policy Forum hosts a website at http://publicpayroll.alaskapolicyforum.org with Alaska state employee salaries, and student media groups in the Lower 48 also have unveiled sites with access to employee pay information.

But the decision to launch the database was met with displeasure from some UA employees after the plan was announced last semester.

Commenters on the Sun Star website complained the information lacked enough context to be interpreted fairly, and Bryant said she also spoke at a UAF staff council meeting to address concerns about the database. Staff council President Pips Veazey didn’t return phone calls this week to discuss the issue.

The database is a snapshot of salaries from March and April 2011, gathered from about 6,000 public documents given to the Sun Star by the university. The Sun Star staff has spent the past eight months converting those records into searchable form.

UAF spokeswoman Marmian Grimes said officials spoke to Bryant to find out how the data would be used, but made no effort to persuade the Sun Star to keep it private.

“There’s value in transparency,” Grimes said. “As much as people might be concerned about it, it gives a realistic picture of what our employees are paid here, and that’s not a bad thing.”

UAF Faculty Senate President Cathy Cahill said her organization hasn’t formally discussed the database, but said she’s wary of the the potential it has for causing workplace friction. Co-workers typically haven’t known each other’s salaries in the past, she said.

“I’d prefer it’s not up, but there’s not much I can do about it,” Cahill said.

She also said the raw numbers don’t necessarily tell the entire story. Many researchers, for example, get a portion of their salaries through outside grant money, and in some cases salaries in the database aren’t shown for an entire 12-month term.

Bryant said she’s sympathetic to employee concerns, and said the Sun Star staff plans to follow up with a series of stories to provide additional context. She said articles about how gender affects pay and the role of adjunct faculty on campus are planned.

“I definitely understand where they’re coming from, and that’s where the reporting part of this comes in,” she said.

Bryant said the Sun Star also is working out a few bugs in its system. Names with apostrophes can’t be accessed, and she said the database currently omits anyone with a salary above $300,000. UAF Chancellor Brian Rogers, who is paid $303,527, is the only employee who falls under that category.

Overall, however, Bryant said she views the effort as a success. Although the data is a matter of public record, tracking down the information without such a tool would be tough without a significant amount of time and effort. The database, she said, helps bridge that gap.

“In this case, public doesn’t necessarily mean accessible,” Bryant said.

Contact staff writer Jeff Richardson at 459-7518.
Comments
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blue5011
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January 23, 2012
"It's the familiar premise that if you don't spend your budget, you'll lose it, so you spend it all and then ask for more, despite producing little to justify the expense."

I thought that was the "government" way? So the UAF follows the same policy?

A 7% reduction in salary to offset a 7% increase in tuition. Is that so difficult? After all, what is 7% of $100,000 (only $7,000), spread the wealth!
Put_Up
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January 23, 2012
Just did a quick search for Heather Bryant...sure enough she didn't make it to her own list and her wages as editor of the Sun Star are paid for by student fees.

alaskaroadrunner
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January 24, 2012
True. The FDNM did not mention that the data base is not set up for student wages. It is to hard to keep track of what job a student has for various reasons. I would urge you to E-mail her for more detailed information on how the data base is set up.
alaskaroadrunner
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January 24, 2012
True. The FDNM did not mention that the data base is not set up for student wages. It is to hard to keep track of what job a student has for various reasons. I would urge you to E-mail her for more detailed information on how the data base is set up. I would also like to point out that the FDNM indirectly points out that Heather Bryant is a student. The Sunstar is a student run newspaper. I would also like to point out that the students at UAF are limited to 20 hours max for campus jobs.
milkdud444
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January 27, 2012
Students can work full time (40 hours a week) with a waiver.
FairbanksOptimist
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January 23, 2012
Yeah but its really the big corporate banks that are the problem....right?
Taga
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January 23, 2012
Let's not forget that immediate family members of UAF employees don't even pay tuition...and yet they raise tuition for everybody else. It's like their own private little club.
whowatchesthewatchers
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January 23, 2012
What the public needs to know is, in most cases, the amounts shown DOES NOT include their benefits package. It cost the UA system another 30 to 50 percent per employee to fund the benefits package. A $65,000.00 per year employee is being compensated in the range of $84,000.00 to about $97,000.00 per year. Couple that with the fact that public employees, when you account for annual leave, sick leave, holiday pay, coffee break, staff meetings, safety meetings, union meetings, department parties, award meetings and continuing education time, only produce an average of about 4 hours of real work per 8 hour day and you can see how out of balance public versus private sector compensation is. I don't fault anyone for going after these jobs, you go where the compensation is best. But maybe we should do something to spread the wealth around a little bit. There sure are a lot of Family members working these jobs.
FairbanksOptimist
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January 23, 2012
I think everyone is missing the point. Its the Big Corporate Banks fault that tuition is so high.

Where are the Occupy Whatever people?
AllAlaskan
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January 23, 2012
There's more to it than just the salaries. Take any department - say, IT? Safety? What are all those project managers "managing," all the while still hiring *more* project managers - to manage what? It's the familiar premise that if you don't spend your budget, you'll lose it, so you spend it all and then ask for more, despite producing little to justify the expense.

There really should be an accounting, department by department, of the need for these pork positions. Tuition is not something we pay just to create jobs for people who don't do much more than read the paper and browse the internet until it's time to go home.
hot-sauce-survivor
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January 26, 2012
It's important to note, as the article touches on, that many of these positions are not funded by tuition. UAF has several research institutes (Geophysical Institute, IARC, Institute of Northern Engineering, etc.) whose faculty AND staff are funded through research grants and contracts. They bring in their own salary, and support other jobs on campus. They also fund positions for undergraduate and graduate students. Graduate students supported by these research grants have their tuition covered, as well.

There are currently, and has been in the past, accountings department by department. Positions have been eliminated or reorganized to reduce unnecessary levels of management, and there have been well-documented layoffs.

Even with budgets being spent, ALL the departments have had their budgets reduced in recent years.
AlaskaRaven
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January 23, 2012
Good start. Some working at IARC and IAB aren't listed, yet their resumes say "Professor UAF." There are also Professors listed there as FT, who work 9 mo and consult with industry in the summer.
loveak
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January 23, 2012
Wow, interesting pay information, I am stunned on how little some make and how much more others make, why would some people in some of these professional and trade job work there, benefits??? look somewhere else folks.

How about realeasing student grade information to see if it matches the pay to the instruction provided.
JustWatching
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January 23, 2012
loveak

Remember those numbers don't always reflect true pay

Some researchers get a percentage of the grant(s) they bring in

Some employees are seasonal or part time
loveak
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January 23, 2012
JustWatching: Thanks,your right, the article comments on that, so....these figures are somewhat pointless to the point the students are making, unless they have additonal information not shared in the article.

Im still stunned at the Chancellors pay. Does anyone know if this is the pay for say a 2 year contract? How much are his benefits worth?

Still, Wow.
hot-sauce-survivor
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January 26, 2012
Justwatching, nobody personally gets a portion of the grants brought in. Those grants pay a portion of the annual salary established by the University. That is, the salary is fixed; what changes with a grant is the source of the funds to pay the salary.
akdriver
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January 23, 2012
Heather Bryant said it’s a particularly relevant discussion because of rapidly rising tuition rates. Tuition rates at UA have doubled since 2001, and a 7 percent increase for undergraduate tuition is planned for the 2012 to 2013 school year.

Obviously, she is wrong. The highest salaries are not paid to professors, but to many administrators, often of highly questionable competence.

hrdharry
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January 23, 2012
My gosh, some of those people have been there since the seventies.
FairbanksOptimist
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January 23, 2012
Worse yet, some of those people still think it is the seventies...
wayuphere
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January 23, 2012
Better still, some of them remember the 70's! Optimist, you must not have been one then.
AlaskaRaven
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January 23, 2012
Good! Would be better if the length of yearly contracts were listed. I know some of the very high ones are only 9 month appointments.
blue5011
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January 23, 2012
Instead of "a 7 percent increase for undergraduate tuition", how about a 7% reduction in University of Alaska employee salaries? Wait for it, "I'll quit before I would accept a 7% reduction in salary".
outtraged
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January 23, 2012
It isn't so amazing that a history professor makes $105151.76 a year. What is amazing is that he can get that for teaching one or two undergrad classes a semester with the help of two teaching assistants. It is also amazing that he can show up late to class regularly and it can all go on year after year with zero repercussions.

spaceman
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January 23, 2012
What's worse is cancelling classes at the last minute making no attempt to notify students. Some students need to make daycare preparations, ride a bus, or walk to class. No excuse for it I say.
Qiuqutarr
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January 23, 2012
It makes me sick that tuition is going to go up 7% in the next year. With the economy doing so bad, how can students and funding agencies keep up with this much increase? UAF needs to work on using the money they receive wisely. It's like they think students have an endless budget. I know many many students who have had to go home and take mediocre jobs because they don't want to go in debt over a few years of classes. I love UAF, have a degree from here myself, but I don't know if I would recommend this school if the prices keep climbing. For what you're paying, might as well go to a private school.
TheAntiClinger
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January 23, 2012
How come no link in the article? Not hard to find but, darn, it seems to me that to be a real part of the 21st century the FDNM could include links and bigger pictures here on this internet thingy.

Heck, with a little work this site might be worth paying for; and I would.
aceandgary
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January 23, 2012
Enough of those rich scientists and grad students!!!!! Time for some transparency....oh wait, what? scientists and grad students are poor? I thought there was some global caliphate of scientists who are hell bent on fabricating the "great global warming swindle" in order to become rich! Lies! All Lies! We must defund science!
mcgillagorilla
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January 23, 2012
you know the chancellor can not do back room deals like politicans so he gets paid up front. what a farce paying him the salary. also a mansion to live in where is the common sense, we have students that are struggling and the state is paying this to him and a few months ago the regents gave him a pay raise which after the hue and cry that was raised he gave back. it was reported he also got two other retirements he was being paid. so i propose we cut his salary in half. if he does not like it replace him. good job students lets see what other hidden things are going up on the hill in the ivory tower.
spaceman
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January 23, 2012
You obviously don't know the difference between the UAF Chancellor and the UA President. Back to your tree.
hrdharry
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January 23, 2012
nice.
shefishs
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January 23, 2012
Congratulations to Heather Byrant and her colleagues, the fact that the youth of today are concerned enough about these matters to bring them to light should be a wake up call to all of us. Keep up the good work.
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