What government officials are paid in central Virginia

What government officials are paid in central Virginia

The RTD salary survey found that most of the area’s top compensation packages are in the 3 largest and still-growing counties: Chesterfield, Hanover & Henrico.

 

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Thomas J. Swartzwelder makes $90,000 as county attorney for rural King and Queen County.

He also brings in $86,000 as county administrator and $49,000 as zoning administrator.

The three salaries put his annual compensation at $225,000 for serving a county with about 7,000 residents, little growth and only a handful of gas stations and restaurants.

Swartzwelder's pay puts him fifth-highest among local government and school officials in central Virginia, according to a survey by the Richmond Times-Dispatch.

Henrico County Manager Virgil R. Hazelett tops the list at $261,166, after joining the county work force in 1972 and rising through the ranks.

Swartzwelder, 45, started in King and Queen 14 months ago as a part-time county attorney and member of the Norfolk-based law firm Kaufman & Canoles. The Board of Supervisors tapped him for the full-time, blended role in November after struggling to fill the two other vacant positions.

Swartzwelder does not see himself in the same league with Hazelett and other top officials from much larger counties and school divisions.

"I don't qualify for that kind of money for any one of my positions," he said. "It's really just three jobs if you pull them together to make one full-time-plus job."

Swartzwelder said he works 50 to 55 hours per week doing all three jobs. He estimates that it would cost taxpayers $35,000 more per year if there were three people doing those jobs. He said the positions he holds are critical for any county to function but added that in tiny King and Queen, "it's really questionable whether all these jobs are year-round, full-time jobs."

King and Queen Board of Supervisors Chairman M.W. "Pete" McDuff, said hiring Swartzwelder for the three positions is "the smartest thing this board has ever done. He is an amazing individual. He is sharp as a tack."

McDuff said the county has brought in outside legal counsel in a couple of instances where concerns of a potential conflict of interest arose over Swartzwelder's multiple roles.

James D. Campbell, executive director of the Virginia Association of Counties, said it is not unusual in smaller localities for one person to serve as, say, the county administrator, planner and budget director.

"It's a little unusual to serve as county attorney and county administrator at the same time, but again, you know, they did talk about it before they did it," Campbell said. "It's really up to the individual, if he feels he can recognize when there might be some conflict, acknowledge that and step back."

The newspaper's compensation survey for fiscal year 2008-09 found that about 500 local government and school division employees receive annual salaries and other compensation of $100,000 or more per year.

Below Hazelett is Chesterfield County school Superintendent Marcus J. Newsome, $248,667; Hanover County Superintendent Stewart D. Roberson, $240,828; Chesterfield Administrator James J.L. Stegmaier, $238,960; and Swartzwelder.

The survey looked at salaries and other perks such as car allowances and deferred compensation for thousands of workers, excluding largely state-funded constitutional positions such as sheriffs and commonwealth's attorneys.

The survey found that $100,000-plus packages are not reserved for top administrators, attorneys and police chiefs. Others include municipal physicians, department directors and deputy directors, as well as school principals, information-technology project managers, a fire captain, a database administrator and an instructional specialist.

And that doesn't take overtime into account. In 2008, Petersburg police Lt. Edwin S. Jones logged enough overtime to put his earnings at $100,764 -- more than City Manager B. David Canada's $99,796 and Police Chief John I. Dixon III's $87,924.

. . .

The abundance of six-figure salaries undercuts the old notion that government jobs offer low pay but are appealing because they come with better security and retirement benefits than positions in the private sector, said Michael Thompson, chairman and president of the Thomas Jefferson Institute for Public Policy, a nonprofit that promotes efficient government.

"Now, not only is it a stable job that you can retire from in 20 years, but you also get paid a heck of a lot," he said. "The whole argument for government jobs has changed over the years."

The Times-Dispatch salary survey found that most of the area's top compensation packages are in the three largest and still-growing counties -- Chesterfield, Hanover and Henrico.

Hanover County Attorney Sterling E. Rives III was sixth overall, at $217,124; followed by Henrico Superintendent Fred S. Morton IV, $211,488; and Chesterfield County Attorney Steven L. Micas, $209,019.

Rounding out the top 10 were Hanover County Administrator Cecil R. "Rhu" Harris Jr., $205,788; and Chesterfield Deputy County Administrator Millard D. Stith Jr., $197,526.

. . .

Last fall, the average pay of local government and school employees in the Richmond area was $39,780, according to the Virginia Employment Commission.

Workers in all categories in the Richmond area -- public and private -- averaged $43,212, about 8 percent more. The gap had widened by 1 percentage point since 1998, according to employment commission data.

Only three of the area's top 25 highest-paid officials work in the city of Richmond.

City Attorney Norman B. Sales makes $175,500, while acting Chief Administrative Officer Christopher L. Beschler makes $177,595; Beschler's regular salary as a deputy chief administrative officer is $162,595. New School Superintendent Yvonne Brandon makes $170,000.

Mayor Dwight C. Jones' salary is capped by ordinance at $125,000, although he also is provided $22,000 in deferred compensation and access to a city vehicle. Last summer, City Councilwoman Reva M. Trammell proposed increasing the salary to $150,000 but withdrew the measure before a vote.

Jones' compensation trails that of seven other city employees, including the mayor's top appointee -- the chief administrative officer -- as well as Police Chief Bryan T. Norwood. Jones has not objected to his pay.

Chesterfield, which leads the area in population and public school enrollment, also leads in the number of government and school employees who receive at least $100,000.

The combined compensation of Chesterfield's 131 six-figure workers totals more than $16 million. By comparison, Swartzwelder oversees an annual budget of about $20 million in King and Queen.

Henrico has 107 six-figure workers, followed by Richmond, 86, and Hanover, 56.

Scott Zaremba, Chesterfield's assistant director of human-resource management, said the number of six-figure salaries in the county government and school system reflects the large and still-mushrooming population.

Another driver, he said, is how long many high-ranking employees have worked in the county. "Some of our people have been here 30-plus years," he said.

Thompson said that with their earning power, government administrators should be held to standards expected of private-sector counterparts.

"If they're going to pay those salaries, it's incumbent to make those bureaucracies as efficient as possible," he said.



Contact Will Jones at (804) 649-6911 or .

Contact Randy Jessee at (804) 649-6118 or .

Staff writer Olympia Meola contributed to this report.


MORE:
They make HOW much? Search and compare the salaries of your local government officials
.
TOP-PAID OFFICIALS
Top 25 overall
Administrators
Police chiefs
School superintendents

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Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by james on March 16, 2009 at 11:36 am

Virginian…. the point he was trying to make was after 20 years you are eligible for a pension. In some cases a pension can carry you for life. In others it’s a good supplement for a new career, usually as a consultant to local governments in the field you were in.

It looks to me like all the RTD did was publish salaries of those who are accountable to the voters, maybe in an effort to make the public angry and get them to scream some more about government. But the bottom line here is it’s responsibility. A county administrator has a huge responsibility; therefore, they are paid a lot of money and deservedly so. Ifd they screw up fire them, but they deserve to be very well-paid for what they do.

Flag Comment Posted by Richard Knoggin on March 16, 2009 at 10:17 am

If you don’t read the newspaper you are uninformed, if you do read
  the newspaper you are misinformed.—Mark Twain

Flag Comment Posted by TravisBickle on March 16, 2009 at 9:48 am

Lazy, tiresome journalism at its worst. Every year, the RTD publishes one of these salary pieces. Why? How about some solid, investigative reporting instead?

Flag Comment Posted by MotleyFool on March 16, 2009 at 9:10 am

I’m with Virginia on this one. What does the head of the RMA make? How about each tier below them? I’m curious how much toll money they soak up instead of putting towards paying off the road debt and removing those never ending tolls.

Flag Comment Posted by robmo35 on March 15, 2009 at 11:02 pm

Bold journalism to look at public records and then publish them?

Flag Comment Posted by NewsGirl on March 15, 2009 at 11:15 am

This is a fluff article. I think its intent is to get people riled up. It’s not working for me, since I know what attorneys and county administrators generally make, elsewhere. And anyone who thinks the position of County Administrator is stable hasn’t been keeping up with events in Spotsylvania and Goochland over the past year.

Flag Comment Posted by cvaresident on March 15, 2009 at 10:17 am

There were several neglected areas here.  In mentioning what people made on overtime, the article neglects what the savings were by paying OT versus paying the benefits for another employee to be hired to do those duties performed while on OT. Also, it fails to mention how “financially responsible” and “conservative” local governments have been with merit increases and Cost of Living Adjustments, so the salary of a government workers has actually been cut when inflation over time is factored in.  The demand for skilled government workers has risen over the past decade, so the salaries have indeed risen. But compression of the pay scale and benefit costs have all come back on the employee.

Flag Comment Posted by FSquirrels on March 15, 2009 at 9:59 am

A couple of comments:

First, the comments of Michael Thompson, chairman and president of the Thomas Jefferson Institute for Public Policy, are ignorant and inaccurate.  A government employee can retire in 20 years?  Really?  I suppose if he starts govt employment at age 47 and has an additional source of retirement income, that may be true. 

Second, why doesn’t the RTD include the salaries of other types of public employees in their analysis?  In particular, how about employees of govt authorities - such as the RMA tollroad authority?  That would be an interesting comparison since those entities aren’t accountable to the voters.

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