Schools

$150K-Plus Salaries For Long Valley Superintendent, Principals

These Washington Township School District administrators make more than $150K a year, according to new data.

LONG VALLEY, NJ — It's becoming more common for superintendents, principals, and educational administrators state-wide to earn more than $150,000 including in Long Valley, according to data from the New Jersey Department of Education.

Patch pulled salary data that includes superintendents, principals and assistant principals, curriculum directors and other employees in administrative positions within New Jersey schools.

Overall, more than 3,200 administrators made $150,000 or more during the 2022-23 school year — about 600 more than the year prior.

Find out what's happening in Long Valleyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

In Morris County, Superintendent of the West Morris Regional High School District Michael Ben-David topped the list of earners with a salary of $254,383 followed by the Morris Hills Regional School District's Superintendent James Jencarelli with $253,893.

Ben-David recently left the West Morris Regional High School District for another job last month and will be replaced by Barbara Sargent, the former superintendent of the Parsippany-Troy Hills Township School District.

Find out what's happening in Long Valleyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The highest earner for the Washington Township School District was the Superintendent of Schools Peter Turnamian, who earned a salary of $193,800 last year.

Here are the top earners in Long Valley's school administration, along with their current or most recent position and most recent salary. All data comes from the New Jersey Department of Education:

  1. Michael Ben-David: Superintendent, $254,383
  2. Steve Ryan: West Morris Mendham High School Principal $203,000
  3. L. Douglas Pechanec: Secretary to the Board of Education $195,515
  4. Peter Turnamian: Superintendent, $193,800
  5. Liz George: Business Administrator for Washington Township Board of Education, $191,444
  6. Timothy Rymer: West Morris Central High School Principal, $181,450
  7. Toni Liskiewicz: West Morris Central Anti-Bullying Specialist, $176,000
  8. Edward Braun: Assistant Superintendent at West Morris Regional High School District, $174,445
  9. Michael Reinknecht: Director of Special Services at West Morris Regional High School District, $174,445
  10. Mark Ippolito: Principal at Long Valley Middle School, $173,838
  11. Anne Meagher: West Morris Mendham Anti-Bullying Specialist, $171,000
  12. Mohammed Abdelaziz: West Morris Mendham High School, $159,110
  13. Denise Scairpon: Director of Special Education & Related Services, $155,851

Why NJ School-Administrator Salaries Are Rising

Former Governor Chris Christie imposed a $175,000 salary cap for superintendents in 2011. In 2017, the Christie administration increased the maximum base pay for superintendents to $191,584.

Then, in 2019, Gov. Phil Murphy signed legislation that repealed the salary cap for superintendents while also establishing guidelines for school-executive contracts to limit or standardize bonuses and other perks.

School executive pay has long been a controversial subject in both local school district budgeting and state policy. Some of the state's highest-paid administrators received five-digit raises last year. But when the position's pay was capped, many districts struggled to maintain experienced superintendents, according to a 2019 analysis from NJ Spotlight.

Superintendents, principals and other school leaders throughout the nation have faced intense scrutiny for COVID-19 management and from politically charged movements to overhaul or eliminate certain subjects and topics from the curriculum. But those obstacles have also fallen to teachers and other rank-and-file school employees. And the pandemic exacerbated New Jersey's shortage of teaching candidates.

With reporting from Michelle Rotuno-Johnson/Patch staff.

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