Putting aside the OP's vagueness, I was curious about compensation for EAA's execs, how much it is, how a specific compensation level is set, etc.
The
EAA's Tax Return (IRS Form 990) is a good place to look. Part VII has the info on employee compensation. According to it, there are 18 EAA employees who make over 100k a year. 13 of those have a position as "
Officers, Directors, Trustees, Key Employees, and Highest Compensated Employees," and are therefore specifically listed by name. I listed this info below, along with the year that the person started their position.
For reference, it seems like EAA pulls in about $55 million in revenue a year. As a non-profit, they of course spend about this same amount. Info is split between a
Form 990 for the EAA (about $44 million) and a
Form 990 for the EAA Aviation Foundation (about $11 million). Note this was all for the fiscal year ending Feb 2020. Revenue was significantly down for the fiscal year ending Feb 2021, due to the pandemic, etc.
To me, just a spectator on the sidelines, these salaries seem (mostly) reasonable. I feared EAA would be one of those orgs with 100 different Vice Presidents, but that's not the case. 6 VPs, one Exec VP, and a CEO. I could kinda see the OP's criticism of the CEO's salary being high (almost $500k). At the same time, Jack Pelton was previously CEO at Cessna, so it's not like he doesn't have an extremely good pedigree.
Could you argue the CEO (or maybe Exec CEO) should take less? Maybe, but probably not by much. I have to assume if you looked at a for-profit company doing $50+ million in business a year, you'd probably see similar compensation numbers (if not more).
The one thing that raises my eyebrows a bit is the tenure of some of these folks. I could only find start dates for a handful of the positions, but Jack Pelton has been in the CEO spot for 10 years. Sean Elliot has been VP Advocacy and Safety for 12 years, and started with EAA back in 2000 as the Director of Air Operations. These tenures seem long. Most every large publicly-traded company I've been involved with seems to have VPs stay in their position for 3-5 years. CEOs maybe a little longer. I don't know what the right length of tenure is, but I have to think there is danger of an org like EAA having it's exec staff become ossified. Aviation tends to have more than its fair share of "good 'ol boys" clubs, and there is no reason for another one. Also, if there isn't movement at the top, that slows development of the next generation of leaders further down the chain.
View attachment 105690