Georgia Lottery executives get $560,000 in bonuses

Aug 13, 2004, 8:45 am (5 comments)

Georgia Lottery

Executives of the Georgia Lottery Corp. received more than $559,000 in bonuses after registering another record sales year, even though the Legislature voted to cut benefits under lottery-funded HOPE scholarships.

The $559,623 in bonuses was approved by the lottery board July 22, board chairman Barbara Dooley said.

It was less than the $587,000 given out in 2003 because the senior staff shrank by two and a half-year bonus for the new chief executive was slightly less than half the $210,000 full-year bonus former CEO Rebecca Paul received, Dooley said.

Paul and three of her lieutenants left in September to run the Tennessee lottery.

Margaret DeFrancisco, hired in January to replace Paul at a $225,000 annual salary, received a $100,000 bonus for six months' work. DeFrancisco deserved the bonus because she "carried us through ... in such great fashion," Dooley said.

Executive vice president Cathy Walls, who served as interim CEO, received a $108,000 bonus, almost triple from the previous year. Senior vice president Joan Schubert was paid an incentive of $70,500, a 76 percent increase over the previous year's bonus. Seven vice presidents received $36,000 bonuses - 36 percent more than last year.

Other employees received smaller bonuses, ranging from $4,700 to $12,600, based on their annual pay and the same as the year before. Lottery salespeople are paid on commission.

According to Dooley, after the departure of Paul and the others, the board promised its remaining executives a boost in incentive pay if they stayed through the fiscal year that ended in June.

For the year, the lottery sold a record $2.71 billion in tickets. In the previous year, $2.6 billion in tickets were sold. It is from the sales revenue that the lottery pays prizes, administrative expenses, marketing and other costs.

The total cash designated for education-related spending, including the HOPE college scholarships, was $782 million - the most in the lottery's 11-year history. So the board felt good about increasing executive bonuses for just one year, Dooley said.

Sen. Mitch Seabaugh, R-Sharpsburg, a member of the General Assembly's lottery oversight committee, said he was "sad that they would take this action."

Compensation for lottery employees came under scrutiny this year as legislators debated how to contain the costs of HOPE scholarships funded by the lottery. An oversight committee in May looked at executives' generous leave package.

Some lawmakers say the Legislature needs to look more closely at the annual bonuses for senior staff and rank-and-file employees, which cost 11 times more than they did in 1993, the lottery's first year.

Seabaugh said the bonuses are "inconsistent" with the General Assembly's recent moves to protect lottery-funded HOPE scholarships, the cost of which, some analysts say, may outpace ticket sales in the next decade.

To save $2.2 million, lawmakers made a change in HOPE's eligibility criteria that could limit benefits for thousands of technical school students.

Sen. Bill Hamrick, R-Carrollton, Senate Higher Education Committee chairman and a member of the lottery oversight committee, noted the bonuses are greater than the annual salaries for many Georgians.

"It sends a mixed message to the people who teach our children and work for the people of Georgia that their work is not just as important as the people who already are well-compensated for the work they do for the state lottery," Hamrick said.

AP

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CASH Only

DeFrancisco ran the corrupt NY lottery before getting hired by Georgia.

CASH Only

Maybe if Ms Paul came to NY, she'd cut down on the corruption.

konane's avatarkonane
Quote: O
CASH Only

Konane:

AFAIK Georgia doesn't force certain lottery winners to receive annuity payments.

bobo7703

 

 

  ms paul did  bad  for  Florida Lotto

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