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CEOs Got Hefty Raises at Some Big Nonprofits

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From Associated Press

The chief executives of the country’s largest nonprofit organizations won median pay raises of 4.3% last year, but some of them have enjoyed substantially larger increases over time, according to a new survey.

Compiled by the Chronicle of Philanthropy and to be released today, the survey found that 45 top executives of charities, foundations, universities and other nonprofits earned $500,000 or more.

Overall, the median increase for nonprofit CEOs rose 4.3% in 2002, nearly twice the rate of inflation. But over the last five years, cumulative raises granted to some of those surveyed were much larger.

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The top gainers include William H. Gray III, the president of the United Negro College Fund, whose pay rose 132% over five years from $175,000 in 1997 to $404,427 in 2002.

Thomas M. Lofton, chairman of the Lilly Endowment, was paid $822,000 last year, an 83% rise since 1997.

Pay for Susan V. Berresford, the president of the Ford Foundation, has risen 48% to $651,713.

Those figures are all separate from the cost of benefits paid to the executives.

At 38 of the 329 nonprofits surveyed by the Chronicle, the highest-paid employee besides the CEO also made at least $500,000 and in some cases made more than their boss, the survey found.

In one striking example, Cornell University’s highest salaried employee, medical professor Zev Rosenwaks, was paid $2.12 million in 2002. Meanwhile, Cornell’s president, Hunter S. Rawlings III, made $205,697, according to the survey.

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