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Province releases annual Sunshine List

Pelham’s $100,000-plus membership grew to 13 from 12 in 2022
pelham-town-hall
Pelham Town Hall.

Between the rising cost of living and the omnipresence of monopolies in the private sector, the annual spring lesson for Ontario youth – if they choose to stay here – is to consider a career in government, proven again by Thursday’s release of the province’s Sunshine List.

The annual list logs all Ontario bureaucrats and politicians who earned more than $100,000 the previous year – a number of workers that jumped to just over 300,000 in 2023 from almost 267,000 in 2022.

On this year’s list, 13,254 Ontarians earned more than $200,000 in government salary, highlighted in Niagara by two outgoing bureaucrats: now-retired Niagara Health Chief of Staff Dr. Johan Viljoen at $587,406, and former Niagara Regional Police Chief Bryan MacCulloch at $356,231.

Locally, Town of Pelham CAO David Cribbs was the only member of the $200,000 club, but Pelham’s $100,000-plus list grew to 13 from 12 in 2022.

Town of Pelham Sunshine List, Position and 2023 Salary

David Cribbs, CAO $207,932

Teresa Quinlin-Murphy, Director of Corporate Services $161,095

Barb Wiens, Director of Planning and Development $161,095

Bob Lymburner, Fire Chief $161,073

Jennifer Stirton, Town Solicitor $154,997

Vickie vanRavenswaay, Director of Recreation, Culture & Wellness $143,224

Jason Marr, Director of Public Works $143,219

Michael Zimmer, Chief Building Official $136,472

Ryan Cook, Manager of Public Works $119,746

Michael Guglielmi, Manager of IT $119,746

Usama Seraj, Manager of Financial Services $119,356

Derek Young, Manager of Engineering $115,144

William Tigert, Interim Town Clerk $106,603

Premier Doug Ford was paid $208,974 last year, some $115,000 less than his own Chief of Staff Patrick Sackville. Niagara West MPP Sam Oosterhoff earned $133,217. Metrolinx CEO Phil Verster – who oversees GO Transit and Toronto’s years-behind-schedule Line 5 LRT project – was paid just over $839,000. For the third straight year, the highest-paid government employee was Ontario Power Generation CEO Kenneth Hartwick at $1.9 million.

 



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John Chick

About the Author: John Chick

John Chick has worked in and out of media for some 20 years, including stints with The Score, CBC, and the Toronto Sun. He covers Pelham Town Council and occasional other items for PelhamToday, and splits his time between Fonthill and Toronto
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