Ontario Sunshine List 1999

SunshineListStats.com is a database of Ontario public sector employees who earned more than 100,000 in 1998 and entered the Ontario Sunshine List.

Salary Name Position
$176,806.54
earned in 1998
CLAUDE LAJEUNESSE President
Ryerson Polytechnic University
$176,758.00
earned in 1998
BARRY MONAGHAN President and Chief Executive Officer
West Park Hospital
$176,754.16
earned in 1998
BRIAN ORR Vice President
Hospital for Sick Children
$176,611.34
earned in 1998
TIM J MILLARD Deputy Minister
Solicitor General & Correctional Svcs
$176,509.00
earned in 1998
ANDREW BERCZI Professor
Wilfrid Laurier University
$176,300.00
earned in 1998
EMMA PAVLOV VP Human Resources
Toronto Hospital
$176,276.91
earned in 1998
BRENDON MULLEN Lab Physician
Mount Sinai Hospital
$176,061.00
earned in 1998
ANDREW POPRAWA President & CEO
Deposit Insurance Corp. of Ontario
$176,003.00
earned in 1998
LINDSAY SHARP President & CEO
Royal Ontario Museum
$175,794.00
earned in 1998
MAHMOOD MALIK Physician/Nuclear Medicine
Hamilton Health Science Ctr.
$175,704.65
earned in 1998
DIMITRIOS DIVARIS Medical Director, Lab
Grand River Hospital
$175,672.22
earned in 1998
IAN CRAIG Physician
London Health Sciences Centre
$175,672.21
earned in 1998
MARY ELLEN KIRK Physician
London Health Sciences Centre
$175,672.20
earned in 1998
DAVID SHUM Physician
London Health Sciences Centre
$175,518.36
earned in 1998
JAROSLAV KOTALIK Radiation Oncologist
Cancer Care Ontario
$175,499.00
earned in 1998
S. BRUCE GOSS Vice-President
Sunnybrook & Women's College
$175,452.34
earned in 1998
WILLIAM CHAPMAN Pathologist
Toronto Hospital
$175,452.34
earned in 1998
MING-SOUND TSAO Pathologist
Toronto Hospital
$175,284.11
earned in 1998
DINA A PALOZZI CEO & Superintendent
Financial Services Commission
$175,283.62
earned in 1998
DAVID LEVINE President & CEO
Ottawa Hospital
Page 13 of 315 - Total result: 6,292
Published March 1999

Ontario Public Sector Salary Disclosure - Sunshine List 1999

The Public Sector Salary Disclosure Act, 1996 makes Ontario’s public sector more open and accountable to taxpayers. The act requires organizations that receive public funding from the Province of Ontario to make public, by March 31 each year, the names, positions, salaries and total taxable benefits of employees paid $100,000 or more in the previous calendar year.

At SunshineListStats.com, we rank employees from organizations that received public funding from the Province of Ontario and earn over $100,000 per year, including total taxable benefits.

This year's sunshine list includes the top earners in Ontario, including:

1999 Ontario Sunshine List: Top Earners

Every year, the Ontario government publishes its annual Sunshine List of public sector servants with six-figure salaries. According to the document, Ontario's 6,292 staffers made the Sunshine List, earning total compensation of $768,444,936.01 in 1998.

At the top of the Ontario Sunshine List

Topping the list for Ontario was Vice President B DEBS, who brought home $1,344,860.00 in 1998.

Following B DEBS was Exec VP & Chief Nuclear Officer C ANDOGNINI, with annual earnings of $1,275,448.00. President & CEO R OSBORNE made $1,150,000.00, Vice President W PEABODY made $948,188.00, and President & CEO O.A. KUPCIS round out the top-five highest-paid employees with $942,959.00 for the Ontario 1999 Sunshine List.

Breaking down the numbers

Among employees who received more than six-figure salaries in 1998, 2,829 received earnings between $100,000 and $110,000 followed by 2,828 who received between $110,001 and $150,000 , 495 received between $150,001 and $200,000 , 87 received between $200,001 and $250,000 , 24 received between $250,001 and $300,000 , and 29 received over $300,000 at Ontario.

  • Salary breakdown
  • 2,829 employees made between $100,000 to $110,000
  • 2,828 employees made between $110,000 to $150,000
  • 495 employees made between $150,000 to $200,000
  • 87 employees made between $200,000 to $250,000
  • 24 employees made between $250,000 to $300,000
  • 29 employees made more than $300,000

For a complete list of public sector employees who made the 1999 Sunshine List, go to Sunshine List 1999 Employees List. If you wish to analyze the list by the employer, go to Sunshine List 1999 Employers List.

Sunshine List Resources

Here are the Frequently Asked Questions about the Ontario Sunshine List.

The Ontario Sunshine List is the Ministry of Finance's listing of salary, benefits, and severance information. The Ontario Sunshine List is the province's annual list of public sector employees and publicly-funded agency employees paid more than $100,000 annually. For a complete list of names, go to SunhineListStats.com

In 1996 the Ontario Sunshine List began as a way to ensure accountability to taxpayers through Ontario's Public Sector Salary Disclosure Act. The annual list of public sector employees who earn over $100,000 per year or greater.

SunhineListStats.com aims to spotlight government spending and public funding to create awareness of where your money is being spent as a taxpayer. It lets taxpayers compare the performance of an organization with the compensation given to the people running it.

No, the Ontario Sunshine List does not include non-taxable benefits such as pension costs. The Sunshine List includes salaries and taxable benefits.

The Ontario Sunshine List is calculated by using a list of taxable salary, benefits, and severance information.

Yes, the Sunshine List does include bonuses, salaries, overtime, severances, and benefits.

Every year Ontario government publishes its annual Sunshine List of public sector servants, which includes nurses, teachers, police officers, and firefighters, with six-figure salaries. In Ontario, 244,390 staffers made the list, earning a total salary of $30,240,295,606.44 (more than thirty billion) in 2021.

The Ontario Sunshine List aims to shed light on government expenditures. The Sunshine List also helps the Ministry of Finance identify public sector employees who earn over $100,000 in salary and above.

Ontario's Public Sector Salary Disclosure Act aims to provide transparency to taxpayers and accountability to the Ontario government regarding hiring practices. Public sector employees earn over $100,000 annually, so taxpayers are naturally interested in how and where their money is being spent. The Ontario Sunshine List is a resource to give taxpayers insight into the use of public funds.

Ontario's Public Sector Salary Disclosure Act aims to provide transparency to taxpayers and accountability to the Ontario government regarding hiring practices. Public sector employees earn over $100,000 annually, so taxpayers are naturally interested in how and where their money is being spent. The Ontario Sunshine List is a resource to give taxpayers insight into the use of public funds.

The $100,000 annual income is calculated before taxes. If these public sector employees are paid $100,000 or more, then the total of these taxable benefits has to be disclosed.