Newfoundland and Labrador Latest Data

Transparency in Public Sector Salaries.

Search the names, positions, salaries, and total taxable benefits of public sector employees in Newfoundland and Labrador paid $100,000 or more in a calendar year.

About the Sunshine List

In Newfoundland and Labrador, the Public Sector Compensation Transparency Act requires public bodies to publish an annual disclosure list of employees whose total compensation is greater than 100,000.

This data provides critical insight into the compensation of government officials, educators, healthcare workers, and public safety officers, ensuring that citizens can see how tax dollars are utilized.

Annual Rank

The 2021 Power List

The highest-paid public sector employees in the Sunshine List 2021.

NAMESALARY

H. Stanley Marshall

President & Chief Exec Officer

$950,200.00

STEWART RORKE

Medical/Radiation Oncologist

$697,100.00

JOY MCCARTHY

Medical/Radiation Oncologist

$671,900.00

DAWN E ARMSTRONG

Medical/Radiation Oncologist

$553,000.00

Gary Kachanoski

Full Professor

$483,300.00

STEVEN MADU

GYNAECOLOGIST

$459,000.00

VISWESWARA PULLELA

ANAESTHETIST

$456,800.00

Vianne Timmons

President & Vice-Chancellor

$450,100.00

Jane Barron

Associate Professor

$442,400.00

Nebojsa Denic

Chief Medical Examiner

$433,900.00

OMESIRI JIMMY GORLEH

DISTRICT MEDICAL OFFICER

$419,500.00

IMAD KELLOW

General Practitioner Category B

$417,800.00

Simon Kirby

Assistant Professor

$416,400.00

Margaret Steele

Dean/Full Professor

$413,500.00

Amrah Pirzada

Assistant Professor

$397,600.00

AMER QURESHI

Medical Internist

$397,600.00

SHANOO KAUR

ANAESTHETIST

$395,000.00

SARADA SRI PALADUGU

OBSTETRICIAN

$392,000.00

CRAIG POCHINI

Medical/Radiation Oncologist

$391,600.00

BRENT TOMPKINS

Medical/Radiation Oncologist

$391,500.00

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about the Newfoundland and Labrador Sunshine List and how public sector salary disclosure works.

What is the Newfoundland and Labrador Sunshine List?

The Newfoundland and Labrador Sunshine List is the annual public disclosure of Newfoundland and Labrador public sector employees who were paid $100,000 or more in a calendar year. It covers government ministries, municipalities, health authorities, school boards, colleges and universities, and provincial agencies.

Who is the highest-paid public sector employee in Newfoundland and Labrador?

H. Stanley Marshall, President & Chief Exec Officer at Nalcor Energy, was the highest-paid employee on the 2021 Newfoundland and Labrador Sunshine List with a salary of $950,200.

See H. Stanley Marshall's salary history

How many people are on the Newfoundland and Labrador Sunshine List?

The 2021 Newfoundland and Labrador Sunshine List includes more than 0 public sector employees — everyone who was paid $100,000 or more by a covered employer in 2021. The list typically grows each year because the threshold is fixed while salaries rise.

What is the Sunshine List salary threshold?

In Newfoundland and Labrador, the disclosure threshold is $100,000 per calendar year. Because the threshold is not adjusted for inflation, more employees cross it every year.

When is the Newfoundland and Labrador Sunshine List released?

Disclosures are published annually, covering the previous calendar or fiscal year. The most recent Newfoundland and Labrador data on this site covers 2021.

Does the Sunshine List include benefits?

Yes. The disclosure reports salary paid and taxable benefits as separate amounts. Employee profiles on this site show both figures, along with salary history across every year a person appears on the list.

How do I check if a name is on the Sunshine List?

Type any name into the search bar on this page. If that person was paid $100,000 or more by a covered Newfoundland and Labrador public sector employer, their employer, position, salary and taxable benefits will appear, including past years.

Search people on the Sunshine List

Why is it called the Sunshine List?

The name comes from the idea of "letting the sunshine in" on public spending — making taxpayer-funded salaries open and transparent. The nickname stuck and is now used for public sector salary disclosures across Canada.