Posts tagged ‘mars discovery district’

CEO of MaRS got 22% raise (one month before Ontario wage freeze?), made $533K in 2010

August 3rd, 2011 by Greg Boutin

The salary of MaRS’s CEO was $533,113 in 2010, according to the Ontario government’s public salary disclosure report, which can be seen at http://www.fin.gov.on.ca/en/publications/salarydisclosure/2011/otherp11.html

That’s an increase of 22% over her 2009 salary.

According to a consultant there, who emailed me anonymously: “MARS is covered by the Province’s salary freeze guidelines. They did this by jamming all the increases through a month before the guidelines went into effect in April 2010 (they joke about it).”

Meanwhile a Canadian site like Sprouter.com is shutting down, though it did more to promote Canadian startups (the majority of the startups featured in their popular newsletter were from here) in North America than MaRS ever did.

Beside the CEO, another 20 MaRS employees are listed as making over $100K in the disclosure, compared to 15 in 2009. The total number of full-time employees in 2009 was only fifty one, as per the nonprofit disclosure (number of employees on this page). The public disclosure for 2010 has not been published yet. The second highest salary is that of the Vice President, Real Estate, at $277K per year.

Last week, MaRS announced a real estate expansion that apparently will see it collect a loan of $230 million from the province. Beside the fact that the taxpayer is guaranteeing that loan and possibly subsidizing it (the interest rate was not mentioned), the whole project will cost $344 million and the rest of the funding was not specified. Although described as a public-private partnership, no private contribution has been announced. Public subsidies may cover the difference.

In spite of receiving government funding for virtually all of the capital to acquire the current buildings, and collecting rents from companies, MaRS still requires millions of dollars in subsidies from the province today. As of 2009, the organization had collected over $140M in subsidies, including $9.5M in 2009 (from the nonprofit disclosure, line 4550). (more…)

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Troubling facts about MaRS Discovery District (Part 1 of 4)

April 7th, 2010 by Greg Boutin
MaRS Discovery District, Toronto. www.marsdd.com/

Image via Wikipedia

At a time when the Ontario provincial government is feeling heat on the executive compensation of public-sector CEOs, I think a deeper look into MaRS Discovery District is warranted. Growthroute had some affiliation with the hub last year as we were referred a couple of projects. I raised my concerns with some insiders about the opacity of those decisions and general “clubiness” level of the institution.

Since then, and in spite of excellent results (I’ll expand and back this in one of the next posts), we have not been referred anything – as expected when I raised my concerns. Instead, we continue to see money handed over to consultants through personal networks, expansion into viable private services, and a hiring frenzy at salaries most start-ups would be envious of.

To those who think bad feelings may affect this post, you are right – and that’s why I have documented all facts and tried to highlight personal experience and opinions as such. And as I found out, I am certainly in good company in Toronto, as so many entrepreneurs and leaders have issues with the way things are run at this innovation hub!

In the first post of this series, I will focus on compensation, expanding on numbers recently raised by @StartupNorth on twitter, and the deficit in public reporting.

“Competitive” compensation

The CEO of MaRS Discovery District in Toronto was paid $471,874 in 2008 and $437,500 in 2007. The information first surfaced in a 2008 MacLeans article on the President of UofT – who happens to be the husband of MaRS’s CEO and makes over $380K from UofT, before substantial benefits.

That salary made MaRS’s CEO one of the highest-paid public employees in Ontario, and the 4th highest-paid person in the “Other Public Sector Employers” category – right after the leaders of Canadian Blood Services, the Ontario Institute for Cancer Research, and the Ontario Power Authority. This is more than the salary of CBC’s head, although he manages an organization that is a hundred times larger. (more…)

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