
Yacolt resident Mark Rose says here in Clark County, the disconnect between the district office and the classroom has officially hit a breaking point
Editor’s note: Opinions expressed in this letter to the editor are those of the author alone and may not reflect the editorial position of ClarkCountyToday.com
You know that sinking feeling when you open your property tax bill? That specific mix of dread and frustration? Keep that feeling in mind the next time a local school district tells you they’re broke.

Here in Clark County, the disconnect between the district office and the classroom has officially hit a breaking point. We’re watching school boards plead poverty, cut essential staff, and threaten to shutter programs. They come to us, hat in hand, asking for more money. But if you look at the payroll for the people at the very top, the math just doesn’t add up.
Take a hard look at Vancouver Public Schools. They just slashed the budget by nearly 9%. That’s real pain for teachers and students. Class sizes go up, support goes down. Yet, Superintendent Jeff Snell is pulling down a base salary reported at over $356,000.2 When you add in the benefits and the perks that don’t always make the headlines, the total compensation can climb even higher.2 It’s tone-deaf. You can’t tell parents you can’t afford paraeducators while the CEO is making private-sector money.
Evergreen Public Schools is in the same boat. They’ve been grappling with cuts ranging from $16 million to $20 million. Enrollment is down. Inflation is up. It’s a mess. But Superintendent John Boyd? He’s one of the highest-paid school employees in the entire state, with a salary north of $390,000. That puts him in the same tax bracket as superintendents in the wealthiest suburbs of Seattle. Does that make sense for a district in Southwest Washington facing a fiscal cliff? Hardly.
Then there’s Battle Ground. This one really stings. Voters rejected the levy, twice. They sent a loud, clear message that they were tapped out. The result was brutal — up to $20 million in cuts. Staff positions gone. Safety and nursing hours reduced. It was a gut punch to the community. Yet, the superintendent position still commands over $272,000 a year. I don’t care how hard the job is; it’s hard to justify a quarter-million-dollar salary when you can’t even convince your own community to fund the basics. And get this, they’re bringing us the levy vote for a third time in 12 months.
I’ll give a little credit where it’s due: Hockinson’s Steve Marshall is taking a pay freeze next year. His salary is already lower than his neighbors, at around $160,000. It’s a gesture. It shows he gets it. But in the grand scheme of things, it’s a drop in the bucket compared to the bloat we’re seeing elsewhere.
Here’s the thing that really grinds my gears. If these massive salaries were buying us world-class results, maybe — maybe — I’d swallow it. But they aren’t. Washington ranks 34th in the nation for recovery in math proficiency post-pandemic and 26th in reading. Test scores are flatlining. We are paying Cadillac prices for a lemon.
There’s talk in Olympia about capping these salaries at $250,000. The “experts” say if we do that, we won’t be able to recruit “top talent.”
I have to ask: Is what we have now “top talent”? Or have we just created a system where districts get into a bidding war with our tax dollars, driving up prices without improving a single student’s reading level?
Until these districts get their own house in order and stop treating the superintendent’s office like a corporate boardroom, they shouldn’t expect a warm welcome from voters. We want our money in the classroom, not in a golden parachute.
Washington State Superintendent Compensation (2023-2024)
Selected Districts emphasizing Top Earners and Southwest Washington (sources 4,6,9)
| District | Superintendent | Annual Base/Total Salary | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chehalis | Dr. Christine Moloney (Former) | $545,618 | Includes ~$350k Severance Payout |
| Lake Washington | Dr. Jon Holmen | $432,108 | Highest “True” Base Salary |
| Renton | Dr. Damien Pattenaude | $428,876 | |
| ESD 189 | (Superintendent) | $414,223 | Educational Service District |
| Auburn | Dr. Alan Spicciati | $410,716 | |
| Lake Stevens | Dr. Ken Collins | $401,078 | |
| Issaquah | Heather Tow-Yick | $394,831 | |
| Bethel | Tom Seigel | $391,792 | |
| Northshore | Michael Tolley | $391,732 | |
| Evergreen (Clark) | John Boyd | $390,895 | Highest in SW Washington |
| Bellingham | Dr. Greg Baker | $386,058 | |
| Tacoma | Josh Garcia | $385,757 | |
| Mukilteo | Dr. Alison Brynelson | $385,103 | |
| Marysville | Dr. Zachary Robbins (Former) | $383,026 | Plus >$400k Severance Payout10 |
| Kent | Israel Vela | $374,141 | |
| Yakima | Trevor Greene | $372,079 | Highest in Central/East WA |
| Edmonds | Dr. Rebecca Miner | $367,802 | |
| Everett | Dr. Ian Saltzman | $365,652 | |
| Snohomish | Dr. Kent Kultgen | $362,229 | |
| Puyallup | Dr. John Polm | $358,570 | |
| Vancouver | Dr. Jeff Snell | $356,835 | District cut ~$35M from budget1 |
| Bellevue | Dr. Kelly Aramaki | $356,000 | |
| Federal Way | Dr. Dani Pfeiffer | $354,061 | |
| Snoqualmie Valley | Dan Schlotfeldt | $349,914 | |
| Shoreline | Susana Reyes | $345,733 | |
| Sumner-Bonney Lake | Dr. Laurie Dent | $345,697 | |
| Clover Park | Ron Banner | $345,646 | |
| Seattle | Brent Jones (Former) | $345,400 | New Contract (2026): $425,00011 |
| North Thurston | Dr. Debra Clemens | $344,599 | |
| Highline | Dr. Ivan Duran | $339,137 | |
| Moses Lake | Monty Sabin | $340,111 | |
| Richland | Dr. Shelley Redinger | $328,142 | |
| Kennewick | Dr. Traci Pierce | $326,847 | |
| Spokane | Adam Swinyard | $325,729 | |
| Battle Ground | Denny Waters | $272,325 | District cut $20M after levy failure |
| Camas | Dr. John Anzalone | $265,133 | |
| Ridgefield | Dr. Jenny Rodriquez | $199,866 | |
| Hockinson | Steve Marshall | $160,000 | Taking pay freeze for 25-26 |
| Colton | (Superintendent) | $125,000 | Small Rural District |
| Orcas Island | Eric Webb | $116,716 | Island District |
| Dixie | (Part-Time) | $35,551 | Micro-District |
Mark Rose
Yacolt
Also read:
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- Opinion: ‘The drama and the waste of taxpayer money continues’Rep. John Ley outlines his objections to the approved fixed-span I-5 Bridge design, citing cost concerns, engineering standards, funding uncertainty, and opposition to light rail and tolls.
- Opinion: Why vote no on the Battle Ground School District levy?Dick Rylander outlines why he believes voters should reject the Battle Ground School District levy, citing costs, enrollment trends, test results, and district spending priorities.
- Letter: The multi-million dollar cash grab in Washington schoolsYacolt resident Mark Rose argues that rising superintendent salaries conflict with classroom cuts and repeated levy requests in Clark County school districts.
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Where are you getting your data? According to https://fiscal.wa.gov/K12/K12Salaries (the link given by Dick Rylander in his Letter to the Editor for school district salary look-up), Steven Marshall, superintendent of Hockinson School District, had an annual salary of $223,062 in 2024-25 and, for the same school year, Battle Ground SD superintendent Shelly Whitten’s salary was $218,732. Hockinson SD has just under 2100 students in 3 schools over a 51 square mile district land area. BGSD, on the other hand, has about 13,000 students in 15 comprehensive schools and 6 alternative learning environment (ALE) programs (CAM, BG Virtual Academy, River Homelink, CASEE, Summit View HS & Open Doors GED program) over a land area of 273 square miles. Even if Mr. Marshall reduced his salary to $160,000 (the salary you claim he is freezing it), his salary per student in his district is $76.19 ($160,000 divided by 2100 students). Mrs. Whitten’s salary per student is $16.83 ($218,732 divided by 13,000 students). When you factor the actual reported salary for Steven Marshall of Hockinson SD of $223,062, divided by the same 2100 students, you get $106.22 per student for his salary. Please stop spreading this disinformation! It’s harming the children in all of these school districts and thereby harming the overall communities. Voting no on local levies directly harms students and indirectly the community. It does NOT change the state funding model to get them to pay more.