Writers worldwide are chatting about Newport Beach’s year-round lifeguards getting compensation packages that sometimes top $200,000, the latest spit-coffee-on-the-computer-monitor revelation concerning public-employee pay.
Discussion of the six-figure salary-and-benefit packages – which include $400 a year for sunglasses and “sun-protection materials” – is all over Twitter, and has even made its way across the Atlantic.
“Time for a career change? California’s Baywatch lifeguards paid up to $210,000 per year,” was the headline at the U.K.’s Mail Online.
“In the latest example of government spending gone wild, The Orange County Register reported that some lifeguards in the nearly bankrupt state of California make over $200,000 per year,” said the International Business Times.
Closer to home, one Orlando blogger said this: “Lifeguards in Orange County’s Newport Beach are earning $200,000 or more a year for the rescue work on beaches where botox, breast implants and cosmetic surgery are rampant.”
The lifeguards in question are part of a 13-person management team; by contrast, the towers are staffed by 200 or so seasonal guards who make about $20 an hour, give or take. Lifeguard management laid out their case in an interview with Register columnist Barbara Venezia, pointing to Newport Beach’s heavy crowds and the potential for public-safety risks if staffing levels are reduced.
In response to proposals for cutting lifeguard hours, they also have launched a Facebook page – “City of Newport, Let the Lifeguards Stay” – that has more than 1,500 fans.
I checked into what nearby cities are paying, and also chatted with Newport Beach City Manager Dave Kiff, and learned a few more things that might be of interest to our friends around the globe.
For one, Newport isn’t alone. Huntington Beach in 2009 paid a dozen lifeguard supervisors (known as “marine safety” officers and lieutenants) more than $100,000 in salary. Specifically, they took home anywhere from $110,000 to $162,000, not counting benefits.
They receive the same pension plan as their Newport Beach counterparts – retire at 50 and get 90 percent of salary each year for life, assuming 30 years of service.
Newport actually compares favorably. In 2010, it paid eight lifeguard supervisors more than $100,000; specifically, their salaries were from $101,000 to $149,000, not counting benefits.
In both cities, overtime pay was a big factor, often reaching into the tens of thousands of dollars.
As for Kiff, he doesn’t want to detract from the service lifeguards are performing: “The lifeguards do put their lives on the line, clearly. When they have to go out and rescue people from the Wedge, we can all just stand on the shore and be terrified at what they’re doing.”
I noted that these full-time lifeguards aren’t staffing the towers, and Kiff replied that while that’s true, they must train their subordinates and must be capable of such rescues.
In addition, they have more than 200 seasonal lifeguards under their command. “That’s a lot of people to supervise,” Kiff said.
The City Council will decide how to proceed. Kiff has suggested converting some full-time lifeguards to part-time, but he’s open to finding other ways to save. Also, while contract talks aren’t under way, Kiff says the lifeguards’ pension is excessive.
“I think they’re appropriately designated as (public) safety employees, but I think their retirement benefit is wrong – I think it’s too much,” Kiff said.
What about you? Does the compensation seem excessive? Or does the job’s importance make it justifiable? Let us know in the comments.
Well, how about the son of the city manager making almost $6000 a year as “assistant head lifeguard”? Does that sound appropriate to you?
This link won’t take you right to the page – search “Burkland.”
http://www.chicoer.com/salaryresults
And yesterday I looked at the Sacramento Bee salary website – I searched state park rangers. Wow – these salaries suddenly jumped in 2010 – for example – one ranger’s salary goes from about $81,000 in 2009 to over $160,000 in 2010.
Here’s that link:
http://www.sacbee.com/statepay/?name=&agency=PARKS+AND+RECREATION&salarylevel=
This is why our state parks are being closed – this, and Jerry Brown’s insistence that we extend those “temporary” taxes we’ve been paying. All for SALARIES!
Oh my! and here’s more! Look at the salaries for the governor’s personal staff! Page after page!
http://www.sacbee.com/statepay/?name=&agency=GOVERNOR%27S+OFFICE&salarylevel=
Scuse me, I have to go outside and emit a blood curdling scream.
I know the socialists will be all over this.
Watch them as they try to set others’ wages.
Watch them as they try to justify their reasons for setting others’ wages.
The socialist are setting wages paid by our taxes…they’re greedily setting them extra high for themselves! They’re doing this without regard to the budget or the sustainability of their self serving schemes and without having created a dime’s worth of wealth in the overall economy. In fact, the socialists are doing everything they can to kill the private sector that feeds them…not too bright.
Interesting. Are these guards paid by city, county or state taxes?
Newport Beach is home to some of the wealthiest of Californians…wonder what their budget looks like?
Tina, no private company in their right mind would ever pay that kind of wage and benefit…they would go broke within a month. Only government has the capacity for such stupidity and they have the cash to keep it going.
Yep, pretty much.
There’s something very fishy about these numbers. A museum curator’s salary drops $3k from 2008 to 2009, presumably due to Arnold’s furlough program, etc., and then doubles in 2010 ???? Nobody, not even a state employee, gets any 100 percent raise.
PARKS AND RECREATION
MUSEUM CURATOR III
2010 – $112,014.00
2009 – $59,234.00
2008 – $62,472.00
Fishy, life guards, ocean, hmmmm….by George I think you’re on to something Libby. But, you’ll have to take it up with the author’s of the story we didn’t write it.