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Metro Vancouver's top executive's salary now tops half a million dollars
Metro Vancouver's top executive's salary now tops half a million dollars

Global News

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • Global News

Metro Vancouver's top executive's salary now tops half a million dollars

See more sharing options Send this page to someone via email Share this item on Twitter Share this item via WhatsApp Share this item on Facebook Metro Vancouver's top executive received a huge salary increase last year, along with performance pay. The regional district's 2024 Statement of Financial Information reveals chief administrative officer Jerry Dobrovolny was paid a base salary of just over $540,000, an increase of nearly $90,000 compared to his 2023 base salary of about $452,000. Get daily National news Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day. Sign up for daily National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy Dobrovolny also received bonus pay of $27,133 and benefits that totalled $25,276. Dobrovolny's entire remuneration in 2024 came in at $592,416. News of the increases comes as Metro Vancouver faces a $250 million lawsuit from the former contractor of the North Shore Wastewater Treatment Plant. The plant itself is an estimated $3 billion over budget. 'I would dare say that not a lot of Metro Vancouver taxpayers got a nearly 20 per cent pay raise over the year, especially if they were at the helm of an organization that was bleeding cash like Metro Vancouver,' said New Westminster Councillor Daniel Fontaine. Story continues below advertisement During a sit-down interview in July 2024, Dobrovolny refused to reveal his taxpayer-funded salary.

6 charts that break down the City of Vancouver's finances for last year
6 charts that break down the City of Vancouver's finances for last year

CBC

time16-04-2025

  • Business
  • CBC

6 charts that break down the City of Vancouver's finances for last year

Every year, it's the biggest disclosure of every municipality in British Columbia. The City of Vancouver is expected to approve its 2024 Statement of Financial Information on Wednesday, a 165-page document that outlines exactly how money was spent in the city last year and how much money virtually every politician and employee made. The yearly disclosure is required by provincial law, and every municipality in B.C. must publicly release their financial statements by June 30. Aside from city hall's budget, it must include the remuneration for every employee, the amount given to different companies for services over $25,000, and the remuneration for every elected official and staff member over $75,000. As such, there are plenty of stories that come out of the annual statements — not just when they're released but in the weeks and months afterward. But here are four immediate stories from Vancouver's statement that caught our eye. A $3 billion city It was just 20 years ago that Vancouver's revenues eclipsed $1 billion for the first time, and since then, they have steadily risen, with the exception of a one-time pandemic in 2020. But last year, they went up at a rate never seen before. For the first time, Vancouver's revenues eclipsed $3 billion in 2024, a $548.5 million increase from 2023. According to the city, the majority of that increase was due to a $333.3 million increase in developer contributions, which the city attributed to "phased community amenities [and] development cost levies." Because most of that increase was unplanned, the city recorded an $860,634 annual surplus, continuing a long line of large surpluses that the city reinvests into various contingency funds and capital projects. Overall, the city's operating expenditures remained similar year over year, with the highest line item going to police protection ($474 million), followed by utilities, parks and recreation, and engineering. Highest paid employees Every year, plenty of attention is paid to the city's highest paid employees, but the list is generally quite stable, with the top managers in various departments generally receiving steady increases in their base pay. So it was again in 2024 in Vancouver, as retiring police Chief Adam Palmer received $487,224, once again the highest in the city. That was a five per cent increase from his 2023 salary, and his three deputy chiefs were the third to fifth highest paid employees in the city, with city manager Paul Mochrie second at $387,110. The top 10 paid employees with the city all made more than $300,000, just the second time that has happened. 6-figure councillors For the first time in Vancouver's history, all sitting councillors received over $100,000 in base compensation for their year in office. The 10 elected councillors made between $102,674 and $119,749 for their roles, with their base rate of $101,937.68 being augmented by various stints as deputy mayor or acting mayor. (Those salaries do not include additional compensation for sitting on various Metro Vancouver boards.) Mayor Ken Sim made $207,958, with $22,756 in local expenses and $28,034 charged for travel and various conferences. There have been several stories about Sim's travel as mayor, and while the amount he's expensed the city is significantly higher than his predecessor Kennedy Stewart, it's comparable with that of Gregor Robertson, Vancouver's mayor from 2008 to 2018, who re-entered political life this month as a federal candidate for Parliament with the Liberal Party. A reminder that what goes around in politics often comes around.

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