College of Medicine salaries will total $1.37 million annually

 
College of Medicine salaries will total $1.37 million annually
Dr. Ernest L. Yoder, Founding Dean of CMU's College of Medicine, is part of a team of faculty that will soon head up.the new medical building currently under construction Yoder anticipates the fresh start with the new building and has plans that focus mainly on accrediting the medical school and creating a fitting curriculum. Although Yoder has spent the past 30 years at different levels of medical study, he says being appointed as founding dean was a bit unexpected. "It was for me literally a dream come true." Yoder said. (Sara Winkler/Staff Photographer)

Dr. Ernest Yoder approached the Board of Trustees last month to report a key accomplishment for the College of Medicine.

The college’s founding dean announced the completion of his “dream dean team” after months of searching — a step in the accreditation process for which the university will allocate a total of $1.37 million for salaries.

According to press releases from University Communications:
Ernest Yoder, dean: $385,000
Deborah Biggs, associate dean of administration and finance: $210,000
Nehad El-Sawi, associate dean of medical education and faculty development: $200,000
Sean Kesterson, associate dean of clinical affairs and hospital relations and chief medical officer: $325,000
Lori Arviso Alvord, associate dean of student affairs: $250,000
Total: $1.37 million

Guidelines from the Liaison Committee on Medical Education, the accrediting body, mandate medical schools have at least the four associate dean positions. Provost Gary Shapiro said the leadership deans are all extremely critical to the College of Medicine’s future success.

“There is a huge amount of work to be done and each of these four individuals brings a great deal of expertise and a great deal of industriousness,” he said. “We are working on all the details that need to be accomplished before we admit our first class.”

Deborah Biggs, associate dean of Administration and Finance, Nehad El-Sawi, associate dean of Medical Education and Faculty Development, Dr. Sean Kesterson, associate dean of Clinical Affairs and Hospital Relations, and Dr. Lori Arviso Alvord, associate dean of Student Affairs, make up CMU’s four associate medical college deans.

MSU College of Human Medicine salaries, according to the university’s faculty and academic staff salary List from 2009-10:
Marsha Rappley, dean: $378,521
Kevin McMahon, executive dean: $252,750
Six associate deans range from about $163,000 to $273,000
*A recent salary list for 2010-11 at MSU is not yet available
Total about $1.8 million/span>

The $1.37 million in associate dean and dean salaries would be allocated annually. That total excludes performance incentives and miscellaneous benefits.

Yoder said the salaries are all at or below the 50th percentile range among similar positions across the country.

“We collected data on comparable salaries at a variety of institutions for a variety of positions (from professional organizations in colleges of medicine),” Shapiro said.

Shapiro said Yoder recommended salaries for each of the deans after they analyzed the data. Shapiro then reviewed the recommendations and submitted the amounts to the Office of Human Resources for approval.

WSU School of Medicine salaries, according to data provided by the university’s corporate/public affairs office:
Valerie Parisi, dean: $400,000
Maryjean Schenk, vice dean of education: $265,675
Kenneth Lee, vice dean of business affairs: $208,275
Robert Frank, interim vice dean of faculty affairs: $364,700
13 associate/assistant deans range from about $88,000 to $245,000
Total about $3.44 million

“The salaries are very reasonable,” Yoder said.

Comparing salaries

Shapiro said CMU had to be competitive because the College of Medicine is a new school. The associate deans at CMU are not paid like those at large and well-known medical colleges, but like medical colleges similar to what CMU will develop into, he said.

“Based upon that, the salaries that we established for our associate deans were suitable in terms of comparable data and were critical for attracting qualified individuals,” he said. “We are not aiming to be the highest paid, but we’re aiming to be within comparable figures.”

In addition to its two highest-ranking deans, Michigan State University employs six associate deans for their College of Human Medicine. Wayne State University employs 13 associate and assistant deans. MSU pays about $1.8 million annually for their college, while WSU pays about $3.44 million for their school of medicine.

CMU has no further plans to hire additional College of Medicine deans at this time, Shapiro said.

Yoder said he and the associate deans will work on many projects this semester. They include recruiting faculty, developing curriculum and creating clinical affiliations.

“I want to stop short of the word ‘overwhelming,’ but the workload is huge because this is all about design and start up,” Yoder said.

He said the College of Medicine will complete their accreditation documents in early February in preparation of the LCME committee meeting.

“The reason we have to have them done in February is for a complete and careful review,” he said.

LCME officials will approve the documents and visit campus in June. CMU will begin recruitment of students in fall 2011, Yoder said.

 
 
  • 912

    A “dream team” for the med school and its cronies. A nightmare for the rest of the university.

  • 248

    this will actually help the university. CMU will be able to qualify for federal grants that they cannot right now.

  • Runrabbitrun

    For real. Especially since Oakland and WMU are building Med schools. Do we really need another Med school in Michigan? The salaries are obscene compared to the rest of campus, and students wonder why their tuition continues to skyrocket.

  • Timbankful

    move over you intellectual dimwits ( social science majors) and make room for real intelligent people.

  • Runrabbitrun

    Next time your kid needs a counselor or, god forbid, you or your child need a psychologist, a social worker, or your child needs a teacher, or you, a lawyer, who mostly likely has a BA or BS in a “social science” such as political science or history, call a Med School Dean. And do you mean “real intelligent” people as in people who are “real” humans—not cyborgs—or do you mean “really intelligent”? Obviously you have added English teachers to “your intellectual dimwits I have ignored” list. Even them real smart medical people got to write real good research.