20070331/肥仔出栏,阳光法案清点安省高薪公仆

Ex-Hydro boss tops salary list

Mar 30, 2007 01:47 PM
ROB FERGUSON AND ROBERT BENZIE
Queen’s Park Bureau

Andre Marin earned $192,565 last year as Ontario’s ombudsman, just under half as much as the man who until a week ago was in charge of his latest target, the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corp.

Lottery chief executive Duncan Brown, who stepped down from his post in advance of Marin’s scathing report into lottery troubles this week, made $364,825 in 2006.

The figures were among thousands released today in the annual “sunshine list,” officially known as the Public Sector Salary Disclosure Act. It was passed by the Mike Harris government in 1996 to reveal the names and salaries of civil servants making more than $100,000 a year.

As usual, the highest salaries were in the electricity sector, with Ontario Power Generation chief executive officer James Hankinson earning $1.48 million plus $7,318 in taxable benefits.

Former Hydro One chief exec Tom Parkinson, who left in a hail of controversy last December, earned $1.56 million last year but his departure settlement was more than twice that.

Carl Isenburg, who heads the Municipal Property Assessment Corporation – another government agency where Marin found serious problems last year – made $270,439.

Other well-known public sector bigwigs on the list include Toronto police chief Bill Blair at $261,304, University of Toronto president Dr. David Naylor at $374,220, Royal Ontario Museum chief executive William Thorsell at $265,701, Hospital for Sick Children chief executive Mary Jo Haddad at $563,061; Ontario Human Rights Commission boss Barbara Hall at $126,786, City of Toronto city manager Shirley Hoy at $297,277, Toronto Children’s Aid Society executive director Carolyn Buck at $174,340 and Scott Haldane, chief executive of the YMCA of Greater Toronto, at $253,750.

Overall, nearly 34,000 Ontario civil servants and employees at Crown corporations, hospitals, municipalities, colleges and universities pulled in more than $100,000 last year.

That translates to a 24 per cent increase in the $100,000 club over 2005.

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