15 Highest Paid Village of Oswego Employees
The following information on the highest paid employees of the Village of Oswego was obtained from a FOIA request.
Salary and benefit information for public employees is public record. We post this information because we think it will be of interest to our readers, many of whom are Oswego residents and taxpayers who foot the bill.
Through the rest of the year, Oswego Patch will regularly post the highest paid individuals from Oswego's remaining taxing bodies: Oswego Police Department, Oswego Fire Department, and the Oswegoland Park District.
We have already posted:
The following information was obtained through a FOIA request. All information reflects the salary for Fiscal Year 2013.
| Name | Position | Salary | Employer Retirement Contribution | Total Annual Salary |
| Steve Jones | Village Administrator | $134,999.90 | $13,972.49 | $148,972.39 |
| Mark Horton | Finance Director | $117,382.93 | $12,149.13 | $129,532.06 |
| Rodney Zenner | Community Development Director | $104,260.21 | $10,790.93 | $115,051.14 |
| Gerald Weaver | Public Works Director | $105,841.01 | $1,428.85 | $107,269.86 |
| Patricia Lariviere | Building and Zoning Dept. Manager | $83,923.84 | $8,686.12 | $92,609.96 |
| Vacant (Previously held by Tony Lucenko) | Economic Development Director | $81,999.84 | $8,456.98 | $90,456.82 |
| Billie Robinson | Asst. Finance Director | $72,974.51 | $7,552.86 | $80,527.37 |
| Ann Spears | Human Resource Director | $71,330.69 | $7,382.73 | $78,713.42 |
| Mark Runyon | Asst. Director of Public Works | $75,478.21 | $1,018.96 | $76,497.17 |
| Ronald Fox | Chief Building Inspector | $67,558.61 | $6,992.32 | $74,550.93 |
| Vacant (Previously held by Jeanne Hester) | Village Clerk | $66,290.22 | $6,861.04 | $73,151.26 |
| James Burbridge | Chief Infrastructure Inspector | $64,957.98 | $6,723.15 | $71,681.13 |
| Michele Bergeron | Community Relations Manager | $64,374.96 | $6,662.81 | $71,037.77 |
| Rick Morphey | Plumbing Inspector | $64,089.17 | $6,633.23 | $70,722.40 |
| Stephen Pierce | Superintendent/Shop Operations | $65,477.98 | $883.95 | $66,361.93 |
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TLC Carpet Floors and More, Inc.
7:16 am on Monday, December 10, 2012
And full medical coverage paid for by you the tax payer. Welcome to national health care for a select few.
bzmanya
8:58 am on Monday, December 10, 2012
How much do these folks pay towards their medical insurance? Surely, it's not totally free without any contribution at all? Does anyone know?
Jen
7:51 am on Monday, December 10, 2012
Way overpaid for "Public Servants"......And lets see a real number here Patch. With benefits and all the perks.
Back in the day when they hung those that killed others (Vaughn) instead of paying for them to eat and crap until they died. People also overthrew government that was out of control. It's time. Time for a Tax Revolt to be taken serioulsly. People are getting upset, very upset. I am sick of this and the "Taj Ma City Hall". Every time I see that building it makes me sick. A fine example of "Government Gone Wild". As I struggle this HolidaySeason with the fact that I can't have parties and get my children the things they need & want because I pay my taxes. Looks like the people above will be having grand festivities. Sickening.
Ron
10:14 pm on Monday, December 10, 2012
Overpaid based on what? Perhaps you can use some evidence to support your claims. Or are you one of the 'reduce all levels of government by 20%' people? Since you can't have 'parties' and get your children the 'things they need', it's obvious you made some poor financial decisions in your life. If you are unable to afford the taxes assessed for your property, perhaps you made a poor decision to purchase such a large house. And now you use government as a scapegoat and throw your children into like they are some victim. Hopefully your children are young enough that they don't understand all of your poor financial decisions you have made.
Richard Saunders
8:34 am on Monday, December 10, 2012
Well, B & M all you want about over-paid public servants, but what they make is based not on what people in town think they should get paid, but on what it takes to attract and keep people that know the job and can do it effectively. In other words - what the market demands.
Based on my own interactions with village staff, honestly I'd say that Gerry Weaver at the price Oswego pays for him, he's the most underpaid Public Works Director around in terms of value.
Oswegosmarts
10:05 am on Monday, December 10, 2012
And with my interations in other communities they think the total opposite of our Public Works Director. Most think he is a joke.
Jen
8:48 am on Monday, December 10, 2012
"Based on what the people in the town think they should be paid" WHAT? Seriously what planet do you live on ? Government, unfortunately votes for their own raises for themselves and their buddies. Our "Teacher Mafia" is a fine example. The above is just a following.
Wake up people.
Richard Saunders
9:40 am on Monday, December 10, 2012
Actually Jen, the people listed here are employees and have NO vote on their own salaries. The people that vote on salaries are the elected officials, who are unpaid.
Also, please quote me correctly, your omission of the word "not" totally distorts what I said. Maybe some more time spent with the teacher mafia would have taught you some grammar.
Ron
10:17 pm on Monday, December 10, 2012
Oh the government votes on their raises line. Have to love this pathetic excuse. Who elected these people into office? You have to remember a simple concept Jen that you can't seem to comprehend. Government works for you, you don't work for the governement.
Jennifer
9:50 am on Monday, December 10, 2012
As directors they do not make an extrodinary amount of money. They can certainly go to another industry and make quite a bit more. Apparently the expectation is that we find people who will work for free or close to it in a government position.
Jane Enviere
9:57 am on Monday, December 10, 2012
Once again, I suspect that this comes down to people thinking no one should make more than they do. lol Salaries are not out of line for the positions and frankly, don't see all that high. I suppose it's all relative based upon one's own experience, but the vast majority of those individuals have posted salaries under $80-85K. I don't find that to be a particularly overwhelming level of compensation.
Oswegosmarts
2:25 pm on Monday, December 10, 2012
All you see are the salaries. You need to see the true cost factor with public funded pension plans and paid time off along with health care plans that no private company offers
Jane Enviere
9:58 am on Monday, December 10, 2012
"seem" - I hate not being able to edit comments! : )
Kelly
10:14 am on Monday, December 10, 2012
I agree with Richard here. Plus, when I look at some of jobs you could compare to the private sector (Human Resources Direction, Community Relations Manager), I see the salaries are lower than the private sector ... at least in my experience. So they could probably go to the private sector and make more money, but we have them here for less. I wouldn't say they're exactly overpaid.
mike ellison
11:54 am on Monday, December 10, 2012
Except that in the private sector their job wouldn't be as secure and they could be subject to being laid off. A gov't job is one in which the employee pretty much knows they'll have for a long time. As a result, they should be paid less than private sector workers. Their benefits are usually much better too.
Jennifer
12:09 pm on Monday, December 10, 2012
Mike- do you have data that supports your statement above? in regards to job security and benefits?
Tim
1:18 pm on Monday, December 10, 2012
Directors do not get 'laid off' in the private sector at the rate you are claiming. The low level employees do, just like in the public sector.
Why this community is still listening to this 'reduce everything 20%' crowd is baffling. Why should anyone be paying any attention to a crowd that can't even be bothered to check if its statements are true before posting them?
The core of their argument is nothing more than:
"They make more money than I do, so they are obviously overpaid", and
"I pay more than $0 in taxes, so I am obviously overtaxed as a result of waste"
Greg O'Neil
8:34 am on Thursday, December 13, 2012
You mean the 74% of the electorate crowd? They are all wrong and you have the answers is that what you're saying? The problem probably isn't as much the amount we are paying in key salaries as it is with the number of people on the public dole. There are way too many public employee serving way too few citizens. We advocate a user pays model where possible, particularly for non-essential government services like park and library programs but also for many school programs. You use it, you pay for it. The give me something for nothing crowd (the 26% who didn't for tax reduction) certainly gets all excited when the prospect of paying their own way. What kind of moron thinks the tax structure in Oswego is perfectly fine when it is among the highest rates in the entire country and puts people on fixed incomes in jeopardy of losing their homes?
mike ellison
1:36 pm on Monday, December 10, 2012
It's not obvious, hah?
"On average, private employees are nearly three times as likely to lose their jobs than public employees."
http://www.publicpurpose.com/apcxv.htm
In Illinois in particular, private employment is down more than double that of public sector....
http://www.governing.com/blogs/by-the-numbers/public-private-sector-cuts-during-recession-by-state.html
Ryan B
2:20 pm on Monday, December 10, 2012
Your article from 1994 is very convincing.
/s
Tim
3:36 pm on Monday, December 10, 2012
This is the type of link someone posts, when they are scrambling to find a single scrap of text to support what they are saying... AFTER they say it.
What that link actually shows, is that in the year 1989 and 1992, public employees had better job security. Unfortunately, you do not yet know how silly you sound when trying to use 2 single data points from the distant past as if they are a good representation of what you just claimed today.
I'm guessing that you actually found the numbers from recently, put failed to post them because they disagree with your claims. Instead, you had to pull years from over 20 years ago to find a time period when your claims were still true.
http://www.governing.com/topics/public-workforce/col-quantifying-public-sector-job-security.html
"employment in the public sector is falling faster than it is in the private sector. The loss of public-sector jobs was backed up by data released recently by the Bureau of Labor Statistics which showed a loss of 280,000 public-sector jobs from December 2010 to December 2011, with most of these losses being experienced at the state and local level."
This of course, ignores the fact that you are comparing unionized labor in the public sector, with non-union labor in the private sector.
Perhaps you would like to learn how that comparison works when you compare union labor in the private sector, with union labor in the public sector. Your homework is to learn how to figure this out... show your work.
Ron
10:19 pm on Monday, December 10, 2012
Of course he won't show his work. Just a bunch of outdated websites with poor comparisons. Mike's ignorance really shows.
Greg O'Neil
8:39 am on Thursday, December 13, 2012
OK WikiTim, you and the 26% crowd can troll around and try and find some statistic to prove your baseless arguments. The 74% is the stat that matters, not what some hermit living in his mommies basement, smoking bongs and eating Cheetos, thinks.
Oswegosmarts
1:48 pm on Monday, December 10, 2012
When the Private employee makes much less than the public employee, and since the private employee supports the wages and benifits of the public sector then you become upside down. The problem is that the public sector has contracts that protect them from being fired. Example you keep hearing about is tenure in the teachers. the same applies for all public employees. I see a Assitant and a shop supervisor for oswego public works. What exactly does a shop supervisor do. Oswego like many other forms of government have created many layers of supervisors, like an Onion. And when you keep comparing them to other towns or employees you develope a leapfrog syndrome. He makes this much in town A so we better pay him more. Do you think the private sector uses this mentality. we better pay them more or they will leave. No don't let the door hit you on the way out there is always someone else to fill the void. Why do you think the state is in trouble and behind on public sector pensions. Wages are what these pensions are based on.
Kelly
2:22 pm on Monday, December 10, 2012
The private sector does use this mentality ... all the time. That's a big factor in how they decide on and adjust salaries. Human Resources employees are constantly researching the salaries paid by other companies for various positions so they can set their base to attract the best talent.
Jane Enviere
2:35 pm on Monday, December 10, 2012
Exactly, Kelly. I've reviewed many salary surveys in order to make compensation decisions for both hourly (professional and non-professional staff) as well as managers/directors. The idea that the private sector says, "Here - take or leave it." is not necessarily accurate. Especially when you look at industries where there is a significant demand.
Not only have I worked for large corporations that routinely (at least annually) did compensation studies, but they even (gasp!) adjusted current employees accordingly. I do have to disagree with the comment that directors are not laid off. They most certainly are. I've definitely seen it happen with senior management. Not necessarily as common as it is with the lower level employees, but it does happen.
Joseph C Manno
2:40 pm on Monday, December 10, 2012
I think that stating that they get paid high salaries in general is out of line. I have no idea what the going salary is for these types of government positions. What might be asked is, "How do these salaries compare with Plainfield, Aurora, Montgomery, Naperville, Geneva, Batavia, Plano, etc...surounding suburbs". Personally, I don't think that these salaries are out of line. Most of us strive to earn more money. Why can't government officials do the same?
Smokingdiesel
3:47 pm on Monday, December 10, 2012
I think they should get paid more!!! Jealousy is a stinky game of pointing fingers and crying poor! Good for them sucks for all the complainers on here?
Oswegosmarts
6:20 pm on Monday, December 10, 2012
The point that I think is funny is when you talk about comparing Oswego to Aurora. Not the same tax base, and or responsibility. Retaining the best employees by paying more is stupid. How many watched School district administrators go to other districts for more money. We need to stop comparing ourselves to other towns and make our own choices. The Police chief filled the void of Village Administrator and the Village did not collapes. Montgomery got rid of theirs and they still are doing fine. My point is maybe you don't need so many layers of the onion like the big cities.
PT
6:21 pm on Monday, December 10, 2012
Doesn't the Oswego Police Department fall under the same taxing body as the Village of Oswego as far as salaries go? You're combining public works employees salaries with village hall employees salaries in this article. I can hardly wait to see the salaries at OPD. Then we can have a real discussion.
Jeri
8:17 pm on Monday, December 10, 2012
can some of these jobs blend together since the building industry is ........non nonexistent?????. I hope they are all looking busy. I see enough on the street to tell a few stories.
mike ellison
9:18 pm on Monday, December 10, 2012
Well Timmy, you don't rule the world and it's not your set of rules that everyone has to follow. There are dozens of studies showing the same thing and anyone with common sense and any business experience sees this in their everyday life. Only you, a contrarian, seem to not be able to see what's right in front of you.
http://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2012/12/surprise-data-reveal-private-sector-works-harder-than-public-employees/
http://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/cbofiles/attachments/01-30-FedPay.pdf
http://www.publicsectorinc.com/forum/2012/06/yes-public-workers-do-have-more-job-security.html
http://blogs.wsj.com/economics/2012/09/22/number-of-the-week-government-workers-stay-put-longer/
Oswegosmarts
12:59 am on Tuesday, December 11, 2012
Nice job Mike, hope all others on this post take the time and read your research. Keep in mind also that many public workers are simply hired due to patronage or nepotism and not skills.
Tim
8:13 am on Tuesday, December 11, 2012
Good to know that you can't follow basic instructions.
You get 0 points.
We will give you one more chance to post your links showing the comparison to private sector unions, with public sector unions. All you have posted, is links comparing public sector unions to private sector non-union, which was already shown to be inaccurate. Let's just ignore that one of your links directly contradicts what you are claiming. Do you even understand what you are reading, or did you not bother to read it at all?
Ron
10:31 am on Tuesday, December 11, 2012
It looks like Mike and Oswegosmarts are just those people who read something and think what they read is actually true when it is the complete opposite.