The late Hal Dengerink topped the list. Dengerink, who retired from WSUV in June 2011, received a deferred compensation package and was paid a total last year of $363,075. Dengerink died in September following a two-year battle with brain cancer.
Dengerink’s annual base salary was about $221,000 (since he didn’t work a full year in 2011, he earned $147,000 in salary), equal to what chancellors on WSU’s Tri-Cities and Spokane campuses earn.
His replacement, Mel Netzhammer, who will start work Monday, will earn $300,000 a year. The university increased the pay to match the going market rate, a school official said earlier this year. Other WSU Vancouver employees in The Columbian’s top 20: Professor Robert Bates; Stephen Bollens, a professor and director of the School of the Environment; Karen Schmaling, vice chancellor of academic affairs; and Lynn Valenter, vice chancellor of finance and operations.
Clark Public Utilities also had five employees make the top 20.
General Manager Wayne Nelson moved from No. 6 to No. 2 on the list, thanks to an 11 percent raise, and the directors of operations, energy resources, engineering and finance ranked 11 through 14. The department directors received 1.5 percent salary increases. Nelson’s raise, his first since 2008, was approved by the utility commissioners, who cited Nelson’s performance and a study of comparable executive salaries.