Despite tax revolt, Lower Merion keeps administrator pay high

Despite tax revolt, Lower Merion keeps administrator pay high

Spread the love

Despite a $27 million settlement with taxpayers in 2022, Lower Merion School District continues to pay top-tier salaries to administrators.Assistant high school principals in the affluent Philadelphia suburb earn nearly $170,000 a year, while the superintendent makes nearly $300,000, according to an investigation by The Center Square. These high salaries endured because of a strong property tax base and the absence of a sustained taxpayer backlash. A revolt began in 2016 over a proposal by school district officials to raise property taxes amid accusations that officials hid budget surpluses. It culminated in June 2022 with a class-action settlement that returned $27 million to taxpayers. While school district officials denied wrongdoing, the settlement provided $15 million to taxpayers who lived in Lower Merion as of August 2016, along with $4 million installments paid in 2023, 2024, and 2025.

In April 2025, the district hired a new superintendent, Dr. Frank Ranelli, giving him a five-year contract valued at $1.5 million. His starting annual salary was $290,000. After inflation, that was lower than the $240,000 given to superintendent Robert Copeland in 2015.Yet the contract was more generous in key areas. The Center Square obtained records under Pennsylvania’s right-to-know law that show Ranelli’s deal includes a 2% annual pay increase — higher than the 1.5% annual increase given to Copeland in 2015. If Ranelli receives another five-year deal, he would make more even after inflation than Copeland. The contract also permits five weeks of vacation, 12 days of sick leave, and $500 for a car each month.The big salaries don’t stop at the top.

Robin Klaibe, principal at Belmont Hills Elementary that has 344 students, made $164,816 from December 2024 to December 2025. Lauren Hopkins, assistant principal at Lower Merion High School, received $167,386 in salary and $11,926 in payouts for unused vacation payouts. Her colleague, Karen deFranco, made $172,201 in base pay. Hopkins and deFranco were two of the four assistant principals at the school of 1,720 students, perhaps best known as the alma mater of the late basketball great Kobe Bryant.

Elite company

Those salaries put Lower Merion’s administrators in elite company. The median pay for school administrators was nearly $104,000 in 2024, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Ranelli’s salary was less than that of Philadelphia’s superintendent, Tony Watlington, who earned $367,500. Yet Lower Merion has just 8,500 students compared to Philadelphia’s 198,000.

One education scholar noted that high salaries for administrators don’t necessarily translate into high student test scores.

“They’re spending more than their peers, and not all their schools are high performing, though they’re all pretty high,” Marguerite Roza, a research professor at Georgetown University’s Edunomics Lab, told The Center Square.

Former Lower Merion superintendent Dr. Christopher W. McGinley said the salaries are not unusual in some districts.

“I am not sure where assistant principal salaries are in that range, but there are places where that title is used, but the individual may have all of the same responsibilities as a building principal does,” he said in an interview. “That salary range could be very appropriate compensation.”

Education experts say the district’s high salaries are mainly a function of its wealth.

“Our experience is that school districts spend what they can,” Roza said. “Most of that money, more than $35,000 per kid, is locally raised, and some taxpayers will pay for that. We see the same thing in the Chicago suburbs.”

In Pennsylvania, Lower Merion spent the seventh-most per student in the state. Eighty-four percent or $31,000 came from local funding, chiefly from property taxes, according to data from the National Center for Education Statistics. By contrast, Philadelphia spent $24,744 per pupil, $10,000 of which came from local sources.

“When a school district has substantially more revenue per student, there is more available to pay for everything, including administrator pay, ” said Molly Pileggi, a scholar at Research Action, a Philadelphia-based nonprofit research group, in an interview with The Center Square.

The undoing of a revolt

Those high salaries also continue because of the lack of a sustained taxpayer’s backlash.In 2016, Lower Merion residents Philip Browndies and Catherine Marchand, along with attorney Arthur Alan Wolk, filed a class-action lawsuit challenging the school district’s planned 4.4% property tax hike for the 2016-17 school year—the case that would lead to the $27 million settlement in 2022. That increase is significantly less than what local officials have approved not once but twice in the past 18 months. Wolk did not return two calls for comment.

In December 2024, Lower Merion commissioners approved a 6.5% increase in local property taxes — the first boost since 2011. Homeowners of a typical house worth $287,600 in 2025 saw their property taxes rise $122 a year, from $1,283 to $1,405.

Seeking to stem further tax hikes, four Republicans ran for seats on the nine-member school board on a platform of fiscal accountability in November. “We deserve transparency,” they wrote on their Facebook page. “Join us to demand answers and more accountability.” In the heavily Democratic township, each of the four Republicans lost decidedly. None of their publicly listed telephone numbers were active.In December, Lower Merion commissioners approved an additional 8% hike in property taxes, down from the initial proposal of 9.5%.Then in January, the school board floated an additional 3.5% hike on property taxes for next school year to fill a $9.5 million budget gap.

Montgomery County, which includes Lower Merion Township, has the second-highest median property taxes in Pennsylvania, at $5,009, according to the state’s Independent Fiscal Office in January.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Dodgers' first baseman loses $2M on home sale after taxes

Dodgers’ first baseman loses $2M on home sale after taxes

By Chris WoodwardThe Center Square Selling a high-value property in Los Angeles? Tax experts advise caution: You could be in the same boat as Los Angeles Dodgers star Freddie Freeman....

WATCH: FOIA reveals 725% increase in Medicaid for IL children without SSNs

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A candidate for the Illinois Statehouse worries there could be a dark side to the 725% increase...
California sues Trump administration over oil pipelines

California sues Trump administration over oil pipelines

By Dave MasonThe Center Square California is suing the Trump administration over its decision to take control of two state pipelines and permit Sable Offshore Corp. to restart pumping oil...
HHS won't use taxpayer dollars for research using aborted fetal tissue

HHS won’t use taxpayer dollars for research using aborted fetal tissue

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services is banning the use of human fetal tissue sourced from elective abortion in federally funded research. Under...
Education Department issues Title 1 consolidation guidance

Education Department issues Title 1 consolidation guidance

By Esther WickhamThe Center Square The U.S. Department of Education issued guidance to state education officials urging Title I schools to consolidate federal, state and local funding into a single...
U.S. Senate postpones Monday votes ahead of govt funding deadline

U.S. Senate postpones Monday votes ahead of govt funding deadline

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square The U.S. Senate canceled votes originally scheduled for Monday due to inclement weather, shortening the timeframe for legislators to pass necessary funding bills to avoid...
Illinois lawmakers clash over ICE funding as DHS bill advances

Illinois lawmakers clash over ICE funding as DHS bill advances

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – An Illinois congressman broke with a faction of moderate Democrats recently by voting against a Department...
Leaders highlight policies to end taxpayer-funded abortions at march for life

Leaders highlight policies to end taxpayer-funded abortions at march for life

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Vice President JD Vance and other elected officials on Friday touted their accomplishments to implement pro-life legislation over the past year at the 53rd annual...
Illinois Quick Hits: End of tax credit causes another Catholic school to close

Illinois Quick Hits: End of tax credit causes another Catholic school to close

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square Another Archdiocese of Chicago school has cited the end of Illinois’ Invest in Kids Scholarship Tax Credit Program as a reason...

Chicago inspector general hopes for urgency to address OT mistakes

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Chicago’s inspector general says she hopes there is urgency to correct mistakes after the city paid $26.5...

Poll shows most Americans support legal limits to abortion

By Tate MillerThe Center Square Pro-life groups celebrate the 53rd annual March for Life event in the wake of a Knights of Columbus-Marist Poll showing that most Americans support legal...
Bill would give parents access to expulsion evidence

Bill would give parents access to expulsion evidence

By Cat Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois lawmakers are weighing legislation that would require public schools to share all evidence used to...
WATCH: Pritzker IDs half billion in ‘reserves;’ SCOTUS considering gun ban challenge

WATCH: Pritzker IDs half billion in ‘reserves;’ SCOTUS considering gun ban challenge

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – In today's edition of Illinois in Focus Daily, The Center Square's Greg Bishop discusses a recent announcement...
Proposed Illinois bill would let local voters approve rent control, drawing sharp criticism

Proposed Illinois bill would let local voters approve rent control, drawing sharp criticism

By Cat Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A proposed Illinois bill, the “Let the People Lift the Ban Act," SB2884, would let local...
Businesses close in Minnesota for anti-ICE ‘economic blackout’

Businesses close in Minnesota for anti-ICE ‘economic blackout’

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square Many businesses across Minnesota closed today as part of an ‘economic blackout’ to protest U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. This comes in response to calls...