The city has drafted an agreement that would allow Lee Bercaw, a 28-year veteran with the force, to[retire and then] immediately be hired back by the city as a contractor to continue serving as chief after he retires in September.

The maneuver would allow him to cash in on an annual pension payment worth at least $96,000 while continuing to collect one of the largest paychecks in city government. The proposal, which includes a double-digit pay raise, is set to go before the Tampa City Council later this week.

He would earn a $241,000 salary per year plus benefits such as annual leave, health insurance and sick pay. He also would be entitled to pay bumps associated with annual performance reviews and for cost-of living increases applicable to other city management employees.

Archived at https://web.archive.org/web/20240404123300/https://www.tampabay.com/news/tampa/2024/04/02/police-department-chief-lee-bercaw-retire-remain-in-charge-mayor-jane-castor-tpd/

  • TowardsTheFuture
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    arrow-down
    1
    ·
    edit-2
    3 months ago

    Nah those are charter schools.

    Hillsborough pays worse: 47.5k for the first 10 years and then it starts going up. 60k is 25 years of experience.

    (Pay starts on page 9)

    https://www.hillsboroughschools.org//cms/lib/FL50000635/Centricity/Domain/3220/23-24Employee_Salary_Schedules.pdf

    Edit: note if you want to count out teacher benefits it’s maybe ~10k per teacher, with 3% to retirement and then like 8.8k for medical. Add the pay roll tax, the $300 a year for supplies, and $600 extra pay for for ~25-30 hours of training every year (get paid maybe $20-25/hr for trainings instead of full amount) and you’re at like $62,300 per teacher in total cost to the county. Note I’m ignoring teacher incentive pay as he also gets it and it’s likely proportional so, I’m ignoring that. But yeah that is minimum 5.5 full cost teachers for just his direct salary+pension.