WASHINGTON, Sept. 1 (UPI) -- Some salaries for chief executives of non-profit foreign aid corporations are out of line, the chairman of a key Senate subcommittee said.
"It conflicts with most people's notion of what a non-profit organization is about when they're paying themselves salaries that are several times higher than what a U.S. Cabinet secretary would earn," said Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., who chairs the subcommittee that funds foreign aid, USA Today reported Tuesday.
The U.S. Agency for International Development -- USAID -- has become "a check-writing agency," he said.
In 2008, USAID's inspector general criticized the American Institutes for Research and the Academy for Education and Development for overhead costs that reached $4 million on a joint program in Yemen that had a total budget of $13.5 million.
The audit also cited the program for failing to reach "intended results."
Sol Pelavin, chief executive officer of American Institutes for Research was paid $1.1 million in 2007, the same year USAID awarded the corporation $269.6 million in funding, the newspaper said.
Pelavin said his salary would increase dramatically if he were to take an equivalent job out of the non-profit sector.
Stephen Moseley, president of AED, said his 2007 salary of $879,530 was "in line" with comparable positions.
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