Tuesday, December 21, 2010

NJASA's Rich Bozza on Superintendent Pay Cuts

The Daily Record published this report on December 21, 2010,  by Rob Jennings worth considering:

Gov. Chris Christie wouldn't last a


month as a school superintendent, a New Jersey

Association of School Administrators official jibed

Monday in charging that Christie's proposed salary

cap is both bad policy and a violation of state law.



In a meeting with the Daily Record editorial board,

NJASA Executive Director Richard Bozza - a former

Montville schools superintendent - said the

proposed cap would lead to massive turnover and

discourage prospective administrators from seeking

the top jobs.



Bozza said the state Legislature, not the Department

of Education, is responsible for setting salaries. He

accused Christie of not adequately considering the

potential ramifications on educational leadership,

arguing that top performers would be recruited by

districts in other states.



Referring to Christie's argument that no

superintendent has a tougher job than the governor

and therefore should not make more than his

$175,000 annual salary, Bozza countered that

Christie couldn't hack it as a local schools chief in

even the smallest of districts.



"If any superintendent acted the way he did, he

wouldn't last a month on the job," Bozza said when

asked about Christie's condemnation Nov. 9 of

Parsippany Superintendent Lee Seitz as a "poster

boy" for greed.



"No superintendent could get up in his or her

community and point fingers at people and degrade

them and still be kept by their school board,

because they expect more professional behavior,"

Bozza said of Christie, who has also criticized

Chatham Superintendent James O'Neill for similarly

seeking a contract extension beyond his proposed

cap.



Bozza's association filed an amicus brief last month

supporting the Parsippany school board's appeal to

the state Appellate Division seeking court-ordered

approval of Seitz' disputed contract extension,

which would bring his annual salary to $234,065

by the 2014/15 school year.



Christie's spokesman, Michael Drewniak, reacted

that Bozza's perspective is jaded by his position.





"His self-interest in on full display in his

comments," Drewniak said. "We are happy to be

defending the public and New Jersey taxpayers in

court, if that's what it takes, on this."



Bozza declined to say Monday whether his group

would eventually file a lawsuit challenging the

proposed caps, which would not take effect until

Feb. 7 and range from $125,000 in small districts to

$175,000 in large districts.



Acting Education Commissioner Rochelle Hendricks,

in the wake of the Seitz controversy, has ordered all

districts not to renegotiate any contracts expiring

after Feb. 7 unless the new terms complied with the

caps.



"It's not just a cap. It's a salary cut for 70 percent of

the people if they continue their employment," Bozza

said.



Bozza took issue with Christie's accusation that

school boards, such as Parsippany, renegotiating

ahead of the effective date are circumventing the

cap.



"There is nothing wrong or illegal about what

school boards are doing," he said.

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