VCU paying Wilder $150,000

VCU paying Wilder $150,000

Lindy Keast Rodman / Times-Dispatch

Former Richmond Mayor L. Douglas Wilder has returned to VCU with a good raise.

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-- Former Richmond Mayor L. Douglas Wilder doesn't have to worry about a freeze on his salary from Virginia Commonwealth University.

Wilder, who holds the title of distinguished professor, got a raise to $150,000 when he returned to VCU full time this month, even as the state portion of faculty salaries is capped by Virginia's budget crunch.

Wilder, who teaches in the L. Douglas Wilder School of Government and Public Affairs, received a VCU salary of $50,000 while he was mayor and $100,000 before then.

He received $125,000 annually from the city while serving as mayor from 2005 through last month.

VCU Rector Thomas Rosenthal said yesterday that Wilder's new salary was negotiated in May, after the mayor decided he would not seek re-election.

"I can honestly say we were not aware of the depth of the problem" the university would face in the state budget crisis, Rosenthal said. But he said the salary is commensurate with Wilder's stature.

Rosenthal said he could not say whether the board of visitors would have acted differently in hindsight. VCU and other four-year colleges face state budget cuts of 15 percent.

Wilder's raise reflects an increase in responsibilities as a 12-month employee, VCU spokeswoman Pam Lepley said. She said the salary is entirely state-funded and does not include benefits.

"Distinguished professor" is an honorary title awarded by the board of visitors. VCU President Eugene P. Trani will hold the title when he retires at the end of June.

Lepley said there are seven distinguished professors who do not have their positions endowed. Of those seven, the average annualized salary is $170,828. She said there are 171 faculty members with salaries of $150,000 or more, which is 6.6 percent of the faculty. Most of them have benefits, she said.

Last year, Wilder taught one class, served as a guest lecturer in other classes, and had responsibilities for university development, Lepley said.

Now, he's responsible for teaching one class in the spring and one in the fall, serving as a guest lecturer, and overseeing the new L. Douglas Wilder Lectureship Series, Lepley said. The series kicked off last month with entertainer Bill Cosby, a longtime friend of Wilder.

Wilder also will pursue development opportunities for the Wilder School and its Center for Public Policy, as well as VCU's College of Humanities and Sciences.

Dan Ream, president of VCU's faculty senate, was cautious about reacting to Wilder's salary.

"I don't feel I have the whole picture of what we're getting for our money," he said.

But William E. Blake Jr., a professor emeritus of history at VCU, described himself as angry and disappointed.

"I really do think it's exorbitant," Blake said. "I really cannot see the justification in that kind of salary for the position."

The average salary of professors at VCU, excluding associate and assistant professors, is $112,745, according to the university. Some are nine-month employees, while others work year-round.

Wilder did not return a message left yesterday with his assistant.


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

Contact Karin Kapsidelis at (804) 649-6119 or .

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Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by JackCrowX on January 09, 2009 at 10:08 am

Rayzor - I hear you. Any coach making millions is questionable at a place designed for supposed “higher learning”. Are they cranking out graduates or barely literate ex-college players?

Wilder is a way for VCU to build supposed prestige.

Flag Comment Posted by Rayzor on January 09, 2009 at 10:03 am

Football coaching? Yeah, you’re right.

Flag Comment Posted by Larry Lanberg on January 09, 2009 at 9:58 am

Bah. Easy money; money for nothing.

Flag Comment Posted by Rayzor on January 09, 2009 at 9:46 am

Like him or not, Wilder is a lawyer, self-made millionaire, professor, former governor and mayor. Wilder’s salary is in line with other faculty at VCU, and frankly, I don’t think $150k is too much to earn for an educator at the college level.

Let’s make a comparison:  UVA football coach Al Groh makes $1.7 MILLION per year. He’s a football coach…nothing more. UVA gets state funding. How does one justify complaining about using state money to pay a well-educated former governor a salary commensurate with that of his peers in academia when a guy who coaches a GAME makes more than ten times what Wilder makes? I don’t have a problem with Wilder’s salary. I do have a problem with paying coaches millions of dollars when professors make a fraction of those salaries.

Flag Comment Posted by Larry Lanberg on January 09, 2009 at 9:43 am

“All of this makes him a valuable asset to VCU students…“

In what way?

I dare say that 95% of the enrolled students do not utilize this “valuable asset”, if they even know it exists, and, this is assuming that a person could even be a “valuable” asset from behind a podium. A teacher of some things, maybe yes, but “valuable asset” is a real stretch!

Flag Comment Posted by Dave on January 09, 2009 at 9:41 am

VCU Professor: Be that as it may, how well do you think it sits with the folks paying the taxes or better yet the folks laid off in these hard times? Why is it that ‘public-spirited’ leaders can’t be more public spirited by setting an example of moderation and self-sacrifice? Your attitude is emblematic of the root problem in this country. Our leadership doesn’t know how to lead and inspire—only how to advance itself at the public’s expense.

Flag Comment Posted by screen_name on January 09, 2009 at 9:39 am

First, Rosenthal appears to be just a lackey of Trani’s. Trani has him out in front, just for appearance sake. Traini is the puppeteer.

Think about Rosenthal’s words. He says they are paying Wilder $75,000 per class due to his stature.  Ironically this means he is not being paid based on work performed, nor as a measure of the little he is contributing to VCU. Wilder appears to have brought the cesspool of corruption to VCU.

With Wilder when you really want to find out what is going on, just follow the money.  He is being paid for influence or for real estate deals he has swung VCU’s way, while Mayor of Richmond.

Watch closely.  Wilder has apparently sought to move the Diamond downtown, not because it’s the right place for a stadium.  His reason is more likely to be so that he could give Trani the Diamond property, while most of the rest of us are deluded by his shell game.

Why else would he hire a developer to draw up a plan for a downtown location without city council’s input or buy-in? All of this occurring while he was on his way out.

With Wilder it’s all about the money. It’s pay-for-play. With Wilder, it’s best to ignore his words and just follow the money. 

Michael Paul where are you when we need you?  On a related issue, Michael Paul - are you going to expose David Hick’s apparent rip off of taxpayer funds to the tune of $120,000 annually for some part time city work as policy advisor, while Council and Mayor Jones look the other way.  Hum, sounds like Wilder all over again.

Flag Comment Posted by Larry Lanberg on January 09, 2009 at 9:25 am

Mr M, Doug Wilder is not productive. His friend though, Bill Cosby, lectures to African-American youths the perils of “easy money” mentality. But, here we have the epitome of EZ Mon-E!

Money for nothing. This is what I was saying in my original post.

Flag Comment Posted by VCU Professor on January 09, 2009 at 9:22 am

Whether you like Wilder or not, whether you approve of his performance as mayor and governor or not, the following facts remain:
1.  Wilder is an important figure in the history of Virginia and of the USA.
2.  He has been a governor, which gives him insider knowledge of Virginia’s government.
3.  He has been a mayor, which gives him insider knowledge of Richmond’s government.

All of this makes him a valuable asset to VCU students, other faculty, and has potential benefits in the university’s relationship to the state legislature (which is where their $$$$$ comes from).  In addition, he adds to the university’s prestige.  His salary is within the range for VCU professors, and not unreasonable.

Flag Comment Posted by flyfishn2 on January 09, 2009 at 8:36 am

MR M how did “racist” enter the picture?  Every time there is a “black” person involved “IT IS RACIST”! Focus on the story!

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