Former chief Green's
salary + pension = $235,000
August 9, 2021; updated
August 11
Last month, former Lansing police chief Daryl Green
started his new job as chief of staff for MSU Police Chief Marlon
Lynch. (source:
Lansing State Journal, 6/10/2021) His MSU salary is
$135,000. That $135,000
will be supplemented by his
$99,348 pension
from the City of Lansing, bringing the total to just under $235,000.
Green joined the LPD on 1/28/1997. His retirement
date was
June 25. He had only 24 years and 2 months of service, so he purchased
10 months of military service credits to reach the minimum 25 for
retirees under age 55. His age at retirement was 53. (source:
Police & Fire
Retirement System June board meeting minutes)
The pension calculation is 3.2% of final average
compensation (FAC) multiplied by years of service (25). The 3.2% is
called the "multiplier".
FAC is the average of the employee's compensation
paid during the period of his 24 highest consecutive months of credited
service. State law prohibits an employer |
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from revealing the calculation details of a public
employee's pension, but we can |
Photo by Nick
King, LSJ, 6/8/2020 |
calculate Green's FAC by dividing his pension
amount by .8 (.8 is 25 times .032). His FAC is $124,185.
New pension provisions apply to police hired on or after August 1, 2014.
They must not only have
25 years of service, but also have reached age 50. And the multiplier
goes down from 3.2% to 2.5%.
Details on pension eligibility and pension
calculation for Lansing police and firefighters are in the
latest
actuarial valuation report starting on page 20.
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I've added Green to my ongoing list of retired
Lansing police and firefighters who have gone on to new careers.
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Mark Alley, Lansing's former chief of police, retired in March
of 2010 to take a job as senior director of risk management for
Emergent BioSolutions Inc. in Lansing. His title then was Vice
President of Global Protective Services and Public Affairs.
We don't know his new salary, but we do know that his
pension from the City is $90,356. Alley retired at
age 48. He had only 24 years and one month of service, so he
purchased another 11 months at a cost of $107,812.
-
Police Lieutenant
Bruce Ferguson retired in 2010 at age 50 with a
$66,507 pension.
In January 2013, he became chief of police for the City
of DeWitt at a salary of $65,000. (Lansing State
Journal, 1/26/2013)
-
David Ford and Walter
Holden retired from the Fire Department in June 2010 to
run First Due Fire
Supply in Mason - established April 2007. Ford's pension is
$70,356 and
Holden's is
$62,288.
Employees also include Lansing firefighter Chris Wheeler and
duty disability retiree Dan Hamel (retired 7/20/2010, pension
$45,560).
Ford and Holden later sold the company to Hamel and are
"working on some other ventures."
-
Tom Cochran
retired as Lansing's fire chief in January, 2012 at age 58.
He receives a pension of approximately $77,000. After
retirement, he served as state representative for six years at a
salary of $71,685. From July 2019 to May
2021, he worked in the State Fire Marshal's office at a salary
of about $105,000. (source: Tom Cochran)
-
Lansing police captain Ray Hall
retired in February 2012 at age 49 to take a job with University of
Michigan-Flint as chief of police. According to
this
response
to my FOIA request, his new salary is $103,000. His City of Lansing
pension
is $73,178. He was 16 months shy of the 25
years needed to qualify for a pension, so he purchased
16 months.
-
In July 2013, former Lansing police chief Teresa Szymanski landed a job as
the Lansing School District's chief operations officer. She
retired from the Lansing
police force on April 19, 2013 at age 50, with 26 years of
service. Her salary on her new job is
$120,000. Her annual pension from
Lansing's Police and Fire Retirement System is about
$90,000, based on what her predecessor
Mark Alley got when he
retired in March 2010.
-
In February 2014, Lieutenant Noel
Garcia retired from the Lansing Police Department after 24
years (LSJ, 2/28/2014). He immediately took a job as law
enforcement instructor for the Lansing Area School District
at a
salary of $62,631. His pension is
approximately $60,000.
-
In November
2014, at age 45, assistant fire chief Trent Atkins accepted the new
position of Emergency Operations Manager at the Board of
Water and Light. His salary was $130,000. He was 9
months short of the 25 years needed to qualify for a City of
Lansing pension, so he purchased them. His pension will
be "around $70,000." (LSJ, 11/25/14)
He later resigned from the BWL,
saying "he has offers to do consulting work and wants to
spend more time with his family." (LSJ, 5/20/17)
-
Daniel Oberst
was chief of training for the Fire Department when retired
on April 18, 2015 at age 54. His pension is about $79,000.
After retirement, he took a job as fire chief
for Bath Township, where his salary was
$61,675.
He left that job when his contract expired.
-
Detective Teresa
Eisfelder retired 3/20/2012 at age 46 with a duty disability. She now works for the U.S.
Marshalls in Georgia as a federal court security officer. Her
pension is $64,936 (LSJ,
8/10/17).
-
Police officer
Robert Merritt retired 5/16/2015 at age 48. His pension is
$53,533. On 5/18/2015, he was hired on contract by LPD to serve
as Public Information Director. His salary is $65,018.
-
Michael Hamel was Assistant Fire Chief for the City
of Lansing when he retired in August of 2016 at the age of 50.
After 2 years at the Lansing Board of Water and Light, he was
hired as Fire Chief for Meridian Township. His salary is $92,716
and his City of Lansing pension is $72,662.49.
-
Lansing police chief Michael
Yankowski retired August 15, 2019 at the age of 46. He purchased a month
of service to bring his total to 25 years. In November, he took a job as
Assistant Director of Institutional Ethics and Compliance in MSU's new
Office of Audit, Risk and Compliance at a salary of
$125,000.
His City of Lansing
pension is
$105,591.78.
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Police captain Thomas Fabus retired March
14, 2020 with a
$86,810
pension. As
reported in the
Lansing State Journal, he has taken a job with the state Attorney
General as Chief of Investigations. His salary is
$112,905.
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Police chief Daryl Green retired June 25, 2021 with a
$99,348 pension. As
reported in the
Lansing State Journal,
his new job was chief of staff for MSU Police Chief Marlon
Lynch at a salary of $135,000.
In August 2022, he left MSU to take a new job as associate vice
president of public safety and chief of police at the University
of Alabama at Birmingham
Send comments, questions, and tips to
stevenrharry@gmail.com or call or text
me at 517-730-2638. If you'd like to be notified by email when I post a
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