I just found out that the CEO of NYRR makes about 500,000 USD/year while other workers barely make more than 60,000 USD/year. I do not think other race directors make half as much as the CEO of NYRR. Is this true?
I just found out that the CEO of NYRR makes about 500,000 USD/year while other workers barely make more than 60,000 USD/year. I do not think other race directors make half as much as the CEO of NYRR. Is this true?
It is a career path that not only requires skill but may in fact isolate your professional expertise to a very confined niche. NYC and its outskirts also have an extremely high standard of living. I see no reason to be surprised he or she makes 600k. They probably have a family to support.
People have to earn wrote:
It is a career path that not only requires skill but may in fact isolate your professional expertise to a very confined niche. NYC and its outskirts also have an extremely high standard of living. I see no reason to be surprised he or she makes 600k. They probably have a family to support.
Anyone know if this wild disparity has gotten better under Mike Capiraso? I don't care how expensive NYC is, only a brain surgeon should make this much money.
sidearm wrote:
Anyone know if this wild disparity has gotten better under Mike Capiraso? I don't care how expensive NYC is, only a brain surgeon should make this much money.
Thanks Bernie, but I won't be voting for you, no matter what you promise is going to be free.
honestly there's not enough face-palm for this statement.
Your logic doesn't make sense. We all have to earn money- those earning $60,000 also have to live reasonably close enough to get to work at NYRR and may have more than one mouth to feed. This is about fair compensation. Many do not agree that a non-profit organization should pay its senior members this much. It is not an industry standard.