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Aoun's 2007-08 pay up 25 percent

New Staff

Published: Thursday, November 5, 2009

Updated: Thursday, November 12, 2009 04:11

Due to a reporting error, the years in which President Joseph Aoun received his salary were incorrectly identified in a previous version of this article. President Aoun made $589,663 in 2006-07 and $737,863 in 2007-08.

Despite economic downturn and a significant drop in the university’s endowment, Northeastern President Joseph Aoun’s salary increased $140,200 from Fiscal Year 2007 to Fiscal Year 2008, according to annual surveys published by the Chronicle of Higher Education.
President Aoun’s salary rose from $589,663 to $737,863, a 25 percent increase. Boston University President Robert A. Brown was paid $804,639 – a more than $97,000 decrease from his salary previous fiscal year.
Vice President of Marketing and Communications Mike Armini declined to comment about the survey.
“It’s longstanding university policy not to comment on compensation of employees or other personnel matters,” he said in an e-mail to The News.
Northeastern’s endowment declined about 30 percent since October 2007, according to a Faculty Senate report published in August. The report also said the university cut $12 million out of its operating budget last fall.
In what Aoun called an “anti-retrenchment” move in March, however, the university began searching for 46 new faculty members, The News reported March 12.
Aoun was the fourth-highest paid Boston-area university president, according to the report. Suffolk University’s president, David J. Sargent, was the highest-paid for the second year in a row with $1.5 million in salary and benefits, the Boston Globe reported Monday. Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Susan Hockfield came second with $875,632, and BU’s Brown came in third. Harvard President Drew Faust was paid $693,739, sixth-most in the area.
In addition to his pay, Aoun lives in a 9,000 square foot, $8.96 million house on Beacon Hill, paid for by the university in 2009.
The median salary for university presidents nationwide rose 6.5 percent to $358,746, according to a The Chronicle of Higher Education survey published Monday.
At private research universities, however, median pay rose 15 percent to $627,000. One quarter of presidents nationwide earns more than $500,000, according to the report.

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47 comments

pissed of employee
Thu Nov 5 2009 17:28
....and NONE of the employees at NU got a raise this year! because the economy is "sooooo bad" . WTF !!???
phil johnson
Thu Nov 5 2009 14:43
Has anyone called Aoun for his comment on this? Just because the raise was approved before the economy went south doesn't mean he has to accept it under the current circumstances. I would like to hear his comments - if he refuses, that speaks for itself as well.
Accountant
Thu Nov 5 2009 13:02
Ok, $589,663 to $737,863 is an increase of $148,200, not $140,200. And a minor in accounting, this journalist is not!
Your name
Thu Nov 5 2009 12:53
Go fμck yourself, Aoun.
LMAO
Thu Nov 5 2009 11:19
Honestly, why are any of you even remotely surprised at this? Auon is in it for himself...duh. Nice digs on Beacon Hill that he apparently couldn't cough up money for, nice raise in pay when a fair amount of students who go to NU can't even afford it because their parents are getting laid off or they themselves can't find jobs...meanwhile Auon and the Provost go trashing Colleges left and right...THEY DON'T CARE ABOUT YOU...
student
Thu Nov 5 2009 10:55
can i get a refund? minus a handful of passionate staff and faculty, ive lost all faith in this instition.
student
Thu Nov 5 2009 10:47
digusting.

the outrage here should be about the situation, not the journalism.

students and staff members have to deal with the restructuring of departments, increases in tuition, less co-op opportunities, and the disorganized process of getting anything done due to the 'nu-shuffle' creating, the educational experience is not near worth the 47,000 we pay every year.

in this economy, Aoun should be happy he has a job at all and should recognize that even if he thinks he deserves a raise (he doesnt) he should have refused it for the wellbeing of the university community and in solidarity with the university community members who have been negatively affected by the economic situation.

if he gets a 25% raise, i want a 25% tuition DEcrease.
call me when the protest is scheduled, plx.

Your name
Thu Nov 5 2009 10:16
John - Um. He's the Provost's boss...
Your name
Thu Nov 5 2009 10:12
I will be paying his salary for the next 10 to 15 years. That makes me sick.
Your name
Thu Nov 5 2009 10:11
Aoun gets a 25% raise and because of the university's "financial situation" I was denied work-study funds this semester. My parents' finances have not increased (only decreased) the past year and I am making less on co-op this year. The university couldn't offer me a $1500 work-study grant.

Does anyone question why we didn't go to a State college? Granted I love the co-op program, but communicating with a private university is frustrating!

John
Thu Nov 5 2009 09:55
Aoun deserves a raise for putting up with the stupid things the Provost does like restructuring colleges without student input.
Co-Op student
Thu Nov 5 2009 09:39
Can someone set up a facebook group to protest this. I will gladly go in on a weekend or take a day off to protest this raise outside his office or his $ 9 million dollar mansion.
Student
Thu Nov 5 2009 09:39
Is there anything we, as a University community can do? A letter writing campaign? Something more vocal?
Staff again
Thu Nov 5 2009 09:34
I don't care what year it was ... 25% is out of line with what the rest of faculty and staff receive. President Aoun was hired, by the Trustees, to up the endowment. Economic downturn aside, has he brought in any money at all - research money? grant money? alumni donations? I think NOT. He is, therefore, not doing his job.
Alum
Thu Nov 5 2009 09:30
A 25% raise????!!! Staff didn't receive any raise this year as the president claimed that the university needed to cut back expenses across the campus. Staff usually only get about a 3% raise and he gets 25% when everyone else gets none? This is ridiculous and if anything his salary should have been cut by 25%. He is overpaid and he even gets free housing...what on earth does he need a raise for? People are struggling to pay their bills while he needs to pay for what exactly? When are our salaries increasing by 25%??
Your name
Thu Nov 5 2009 09:29
According to the admissions website, NU students pay $47,622 in tuition, fees and room and board this year (2009-10). That doesn't include travel costs and books, which are estimated by the university to total about $2,800 (average).

In this horrible economic situation, students can't be paying for the president to receive such a raise, especially when budgets for other programs around the university have been cut. It's hard enough for some students and families to pay this tuition, and it's despicable that the president is getting paid so much. $589,633 is already higher than I think he should be getting (especially in addition to the $9 million house), never mind $737,863 plus the house.

Barack Obama
Thu Nov 5 2009 09:26
God this publication is pathetic. I basically only read it now to laugh at how terrible it is. You guys could at least fact check and edit your stories. But I suppose that would take time away from pretending you're legitimate journalists...
Irate Staff member
Thu Nov 5 2009 09:20
I am 'staff', and the "number for staff" was 0%, not 1%. If this story is 100% accurate, this is absolutely APPALLING!!! How is this justified? I would love to hear the Board of Trustee's reasoning for this, as well as President Aoun's response to why he accepted such a large raise when the rest of us didn't receive any.
Umm, fact checking?
Thu Nov 5 2009 09:14
Get your facts straight. The raise was between fiscal year 2007 and 2008, not 2008 and 2009. Fiscal year 2008's budget was set in March of 2007, far before any concerns of economic turmoil. All executive raises were 0% last year.
Sam
Thu Nov 5 2009 09:14
This really is disgraceful.

Any disgruntled administrators or staff out there - What can we do, starting now, to make sure this doesn't happen next year?







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