BC Ferries is Your Marine Highway


 
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Who is on the Gravy Train?

BC Ferry Board of Directors Compensation

 

1981 - 1996

2001

2004

2008

Chair

$4000

$30,000

$75,000

$140,000

Director

$3000

$15,000

$16,500

$35,000

Meeting Chair

$500

$750

$1,000

$1500

Meeting Director

$200

$750

$1,000

$1500

 Teleconferance under ½ hour

$100

$375

 

Unknown

 Teleconferance over 1/2hour full pay

Full pay

Full pay

$500 up to two hours in length

Unknown

 Breakfast

$13.50

$13.50

Unknown

Unknown

Lunch

$13.50

$13.50

Unknown

Unknown

 Dinner

$22.00

$22.00

Unknown

Unknown

 Vice Chair, also Audit and Finance Committee Chairs

 

 

Additional $10,000

Vice Chair makes $48,000

 Other Chairs of a Committee

 

 

Additional $5,000

Unknown

BC Ferries board gives itself $18,000 pay increase
Last Updated: Wednesday, April 16, 2008 |  CBC News

There has been another increase at BC Ferries, but this time it's a 60 per cent pay increase for the board of directors.


B.C.'s Transportation Minister Kevin Falcon said he has told the chairman of BC Ferries that the pay raise — $30,000 to $48,000 a year for the part-time jobs of the regular board members — is far too generous.
The board of BC Ferries has hiked fares and their own pay. The board of BC Ferries has hiked fares and their own pay.
(CBC)


"I actually phoned the chair of the board and I made it clear that the position of this government is that I think that is far too generous an increase," Falcon said Tuesday in Victoria.

The board chair, Elizabeth J. Harrison, also received a pay raise on April 1, when the pay hike went into effect, from $105,000 to $140,000 a year. Five new members were appointed to the 13-member board on April 11.
But apart from picking up the phone and complaining, Falcon said he won't do anything else to stop the increase.

The NDP transportation critic Leonard Krog thinks Falcon needs to do more.


"A 60 per cent pay increase for BC Ferries directors is outrageous, especially at a time [when] ferry fares are rising steadily. This minister can tell that board to roll it back," said Krog.


"I've got families in Nanaimo who would happily take up a part-time position for $48,000 a year," said Krog.

But Falcon insisted he's not going to interfere with the operations of BC Ferries.

"The chair and the board are independent of government. We structure it that way," said Falcon.

Since 2003, BC Ferries has been structured as a private company owned entirely by the B.C. government. It has been operating with a 60-year contract to provide ferry service for the province.

On April 1, BC Ferries hiked fares by an average of 7.3 per cent on the three major routes connecting Vancouver Island to the Lower Mainland and an average of four per cent on the remaining routes.

The company said the "fare increases are necessary due to the rising cost of fuel as well as operating and capital expenditures."