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Larry Powell, Fresno School Superintendent, Takes $800,000 Pay Cut

Larry Powell Fresno Superintendent

TRACIE CONE   08/28/11 01:08 PM ET   AP

FRESNO, Calif. -- Some people give back to their community. Then there's Fresno County School Superintendent Larry Powell, who's really giving back. As in $800,000 – what would have been his compensation for the next three years.

Until his term expires in 2015, Powell will run 325 schools and 35 school districts with 195,000 students, all for less than a starting California teacher earns.

"How much do we need to keep accumulating?" asks Powell, 63. "There's no reason for me to keep stockpiling money."

Powell's generosity is more than just a gesture in a region with some of the nation's highest rates of unemployment. As he prepares for retirement, he wants to ensure that his pet projects survive California budget cuts. And the man who started his career as a high school civics teacher, who has made anti-bullying his mission, hopes his act of generosity will help restore faith in the government he once taught students to respect.

"A part of me has chaffed at what they did in Bell," Powell said, recalling the corrupt Southern California city officials who secretly boosted their salaries by hundreds of thousands of dollars. "It's hard to believe that someone in the public trust would do that to the public. My wife and I asked ourselves `What can we do that might restore confidence in government?'"

Powell's answer? Ask his board to allow him to return $288,241 in salary and benefits for the next three and a half years of his term. He technically retired, then agreed to be hired back to work for $31,000 a year – $10,000 less than a first-year teacher – and with no benefits.

"I thought it was so very generous on his part," said school board member Sally Tannenbaum. "We get to keep him, but at a much lower rate."

His move was so low-key, his manner so unassuming, that it took four days after the school board meeting for word of his act to get out to the community. There were no press releases or self-congratulatory pats on the back.

"Things like this are what America is all about," said friend Alan Autry, Fresno's former celebrity mayor who played Capt. Bubba Skinner on the TV series "In the Heat of The Night."

"America is as much about overcoming obstacles in difficult times as it is opulence," Autry said. "This reminds me of the great sacrifices made throughout our history, especially the Great Depression."

No one has been more surprised about the positive reaction than Powell, a lifelong educator who didn't realize that what he did was newsworthy. He chuckles at his desk when yet another e-mail arrives from a colleague blown away by his generosity. Two days after word got out he had received 200 messages on his Facebook page.

"When you make good choices, good things happen to you," said Powell, who tends to talk in the kind of uplifting phrases that also make him a sought-after motivational speaker.

He even sees as an asset his childhood contraction of polio, which left him with a limp and a brace, and now a lingering post-polio syndrome.

"It's the most spectacular thing that has happened to me in all my life," he said. "People stepped up to help me be successful."

Powell might credit others, but others say Powell's drive always has come from within. Despite the right leg brace and experimental operations to stop the growth of his healthy leg, he became a champion high school wrestler in Fresno and set a record for one of the most dreaded of all gym class drills – the 20-foot rope climb, which he completed in 1.8 seconds. Today he carries a six handicap in golf.

After moving into school administration he became deputy superintendent, and was appointed to his current job before running for the office in 2006.

The ordained Baptist minister, who serves on the board of a national anti-bullying group that sprang from the Columbine shootings, is so popular he even counts among his friends his contract bargaining nemesis, the former head of the employees' union.

"For a leader to step up to help the budget is phenomenal," said Mike Lepore. "It gives you hope. It gives you the feeling that everything is being done to try to make education work. It's Larry. It really is."

Powell will still earn a six-figure retirement, especially hefty by the standards of California's farming heartland. But because his salary comes out of the district's discretionary budget, for the next three years he'll be able to steer the money he is giving up where he wants: to programs for kindergarten and preschool, the arts and a pet project that steers B and C students into college by teaching them how to take notes and develop strategy skills.

"Our goal has never been to have things," Powell said of himself and his wife, Dot. "We want to give back."

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FRESNO, Calif. -- Some people give back to their community. Then there's Fresno County School Superintendent Larry Powell, who's really giving back. As in $800,000 – what would have been his com...
FRESNO, Calif. -- Some people give back to their community. Then there's Fresno County School Superintendent Larry Powell, who's really giving back. As in $800,000 – what would have been his com...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dbrett480
06:59 PM on 09/07/2011
How come paycuts like these are only expected of public employees? When will a Wall street executive make a similar gesture?
12:28 PM on 09/09/2011
or maybe add the movie star..banker..Non Profit administrative money grabbers...brokers of all kinds....pro-athletes...administrators of universities....media moguls...the elite...and now we have corporations that now considered to be on the same status as people...all corporations.

This guy stands alone. Sad that only ONE person understands and is willing to do their part to make a change.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mark Scott
02:45 PM on 09/07/2011
This is what real heroes do. This is what real people do.
Tea Qaeda supporters take note - this is a thing we progressives call "altruism". It's concentrated human decency. It's mankind at its best.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sportswoman
12:53 AM on 09/02/2011
The larger question is why superintendents are paid 4-5x what a teacher makes...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mark Scott
02:46 PM on 09/07/2011
All professions have hierarchies and career paths.

BTW, more like 10- 20x what a teacher gets paid.
04:09 PM on 08/31/2011
This is an act of generosity. Some of our congressmen/women are asking for a pay raise. Different mind sets.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ms eve
10:59 AM on 08/31/2011
Too bad that some of the CEOs with gazillion dollar bonuses don't think this way. If they did, think of the number of jobs they could save or create. How many vacation homes, yachts, thousand dollar bottles of wine, and $10,000 suits does one person need? Forego the bonuses and use the money to create jobs for Americans!!!
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Wattree
Eric L. Wattree is a writer, poet, and musician, b
05:06 AM on 08/31/2011
I can appreciate the gesture, but why doesn't he just take the money and quietly spend it in areas where he thinks it would be most useful. Sorry, but I smell a publicity stunt designed to help him attain higher office. Giving away $288,241 a year sounds like a grand gesture, until you think of the millions of dollars of free publicity he's going to get for it. So if he does intend to run for higher office, he's actually saving himself money.

Rule of thumb: Never trust ANY politician - after all, they've chosen to live a life of crime.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ms eve
11:03 AM on 08/31/2011
If he takes the money, he pays tax on it. If he doesn't, then the full amount is available for the school board to use where it is needed. Can't you accept that this man's gesture may be an authentic one with no ulterior motive?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Abdel AlHabbo
Fullmooners of the World, UNITE!
02:02 AM on 08/31/2011
800,000/3 = 266,666 dollars per year...hmmm....
I'm all for teachers making more money than they are now. But is this guy really teaching or just a bureaucrat sitting behind a desk?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mark Scott
02:47 PM on 09/07/2011
No, he's a superintendent. That's about as high a level as you can attain as a teacher.
foresure
Brash and Harsh
09:42 PM on 08/30/2011
If he "technically retired", did he get his pension? Hmmmm
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wayne the pain
07:30 PM on 08/30/2011
A beginning teachers salary is about what he is worth! It is a scam, he has some deferred payment deal. This media con man will get his eight hundred thousand a year, guaranteed!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wontbfooledagain
Look out kid, it's somethin' you did (Dylan)
11:04 AM on 08/30/2011
It isn't a scam. He could have retired today and drifted into the sunset. He is providing valuable services to his community. Think about he "Drop" program in Philadelphia where high-ranking city officials and even elected officials - enrolled in DROP, quit briefly to collect their lump-sum payments, and then returned to their jobs - sometimes at a higher salary then before they left!

In other headlines, Michael Vick of the Philadelphia Eagles has a new contract worth $100 million, $36 million guaranteed. Those who complain about this school administrators salary will probably be watching their football teams and their million dollar men this fall. Where are out priorities?
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07:41 AM on 08/30/2011
wow, this guy has certainly learned how to scam the system. is that what this 'educator' teaches?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
contradiction
Share the luv, money and healthcare.
04:21 PM on 08/30/2011
Wha? What scam do you think he is pulling?
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08:33 PM on 08/30/2011
from lampoonist's post a few below here:
------------------
This is NOT altruism nor is it noble.

But it is self-servi­ng and Larry is being rather disingenuo­us by not pointing this out.

Under the current Cali teacher pension formula, Mr. Powell will retire with a $240,000 annual pension.

That's 96% of his current $250,000.

Cali law also provides that a retiree can work in the system and make a maximum of $31,000 per year and no added service credit. Anything over $31,000 would reduce his actual pension dollar for dollar.

So, by retiring, he gets to make $271,000. By not retiring, he gets his current $250,000. Hmmmmm....­.

However the Cali retirement formula changes to lower for next and subsequent years and, if he doesn't retire prior, his new pension factor will "only" be 88% or $220,000 annually FOR THE REST OF YOUR LIFE.

$20,000 loss per year for approx. 17 years, give or take a couple.

He is not giving back $703,000 ($800k minus $93K (3 X 31,000)), he's adding $21,000 per year for life.
01:26 AM on 08/30/2011
Government is broken. However, this man still knows what "community" was before it went corporate, and what "citizens" were before they became "units" on an IRS ledger sheet. I hope his community takes a pause to consider all the implications of his action--and I hope they safeguard it, because for every person like him there are scores of people who would gladly abscond with the money he's trying to save everyone.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Abelardo Perez
Obama won...Yay?
11:09 PM on 08/29/2011
the fact that this guy makes over $300k is ridiculous...but i'm glad to see money hasn't gotten to his head like all CEO's out there...who think they only way they can create jobs is by increasing their salaries/benefits and cutting the wages of their workers
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sigmetsue
militantly moderate
06:02 PM on 08/29/2011
It's not that big a sacrifice. He retired and then took his old job back to be paid the dollar difference between his pension and his old salary. It's like when I substitute teach. I earn money on top of my retired teacher's pension. It's not double dipping exactly because you ARE working rather than relaxing and raking in the bucks. But it's not that big a deal. Mr. Powell is just being paid out of a different pot of money. He could retire entirely and give his job to a younger administrator, but I'm glad he didn't. He's a terrifically competent administrator. Education needs his wisdom and experience.
01:28 AM on 08/30/2011
It's still a lot of money to walk away from, and I don't see anyone else doing it... do you?
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sigmetsue
militantly moderate
10:37 PM on 09/01/2011
Actually, he isn't, really. His retirement pay is pretty much the same as his supt. pay, plus he gets extra pay to continue as supt. At a lower level, I did that by retiring from teaching and subbing. I get the retirement pay plus the sub pay and ended up with $20,000 more per year retired than if I'd continued teaching full time. No sacrifice at all!
05:37 PM on 08/29/2011
Apparently, my slightly more technical post was flagged by someone who couldn't handle the truth.

Here is a shorter version.

Due a change in the Cali pension formula that takes effect next year, Mr. Powell makes $20,000 more if he retires this year ($240,000 per year pension) than if he waited until next year or beyond ($220,000 per year). The $31,000 he is going to try to survive on is over and above these pension amounts.

That $20,000 more is per annum and is for the rest of his life.

Personally, I think Mr. Powell is being a bit disingenuous by accepting the all the accolades without disclosing his windfall.

If you want to see the full explanation I wrote, go to sacbee.com and search larry powell. It will be under LustyLampoonist.