Salaries and hours
  • MatthewRoth
    Posts: 3,210
    I’m going to lightly insist that the salary band be posted either in the forum post or in the full job description (attached or at a web page linked in the post) or the post gets deleted.

    Yeah, I understand that people won’t apply if it’s not interesting enough, but there is another post today where the salary isn’t listed. It really stinks that it doesn’t occur to pastors to post the salary possibilities.

    Also, hours: three weekend Masses all with music, rehearsals, solemnities, assisting with musical selections for weddings and funerals, playing or arranging for keyboard music, and supervising an organ installation project? That’s not really part-time work. You might not get exactly forty hours every week if there is not an expectation that you provide music every week on some weekday/night, but it’s a lot of work. It greatly impedes having a day job, which is probably necessary to get benefits at a decent enough price. Health insurance is going to explode in price in many states come January. Pastors should factor this in and should probably add $200 or more a month for employees who aren’t receiving a benefits package but who can’t get benefits via a spouse or a day job. They should already do this, but it is more urgent now.
  • kevinfkevinf
    Posts: 1,237
    Why is it more urgent now? Its always been important. I consult with clergy looking for musicians and many of them are afraid to post such information. And many more don't even understand the importance of a salary of any kind. Slowly that is changing but only slowly. I think as younger clergy come into pastorates that will improve. And folks I know that are teaching at seminaries are helping young clergy to undestand such matters. Frankly, salaries look better than they ever have if you ask me.
  • davido
    Posts: 1,150
    There are also pastors that want to negotiate a salary. For example, asking what a candidate’s salary expectations are. They may view this as a way to save money by getting a low bidder? I think in practice it really means they know they can’t pay you a lot, but they need a place to begin the conversation. In the case of school principals, I have seen pastors negotiate to find a number both parties can agree on. Parish managers too.
  • AbbysmumAbbysmum
    Posts: 105
    A part of me is envious that you even get paid, even if it's a pittance. My parish is insisting that all music continues to be a volunteer positions. I've started tracking my hours (so I can "bill" them at the end of the Christmas season so they can see how much free labour they are actually getting). I've started saying no to things, especially last-minute things, saying I'm working my (paid) day job, which is mostly true (I am blessed enough to have a job where I set most of my own hours, so I'm setting my hours to be at the time they need me).

    I've explained a few times now that if you want musicians that spend time on music, you have to pay them for that time. Or else we will work elsewhere for pay, and your music will suffer. They also don't comprehend how much invisible time goes into it.
  • AbbysmumAbbysmum
    Posts: 105
    There are also pastors that want to negotiate a salary. For example, asking what a candidate’s salary expectations are. They may view this as a way to save money by getting a low bidder? I think in practice it really means they know they can’t pay you a lot, but they need a place to begin the conversation. In the case of school principals, I have seen pastors negotiate to find a number both parties can agree on. Parish managers too.


    I detest this practice. A job should have a salary, or at least a range. Don't make me guess how much I think you're willing to pay. You have a budget. Use it.
  • MatthewRoth
    Posts: 3,210
    Kevin, I mean that if you're going to pay someone to be technically part-time, where the diocese isn't willing to pony up for health insurance, even though in reality the job precludes them from having another day job, then the parish should add a significant chunk to pay for an exchange premium (there are lots of unmarried people in music, or people whose spouses don't have benefits either…). It's that prices are likely to go up for most of the people buying their own insurance which makes this more urgent. I know, pastors already hide the salary for various reasons.
  • kevinfkevinf
    Posts: 1,237
    And now you are into the deeply problematic area known as part-time. Parishes and dioceses often say that if you work less than 25 (some places 29) hours, you are part-time. And of course you are not eligible for health insurance,etc. But that many hours prevents you from another job. You are right that the question of insurance should be on the table. But I say let there be another level where part-timers can either be paid to get insurance or the insurance is made available to them in some way. The reason is that the diocese gets a group rate which is in many instances, cheaper than someone buying their own insurance. Sadly, no one has taken me up on that problem.
    Thanked by 1LauraKaz
  • francis
    Posts: 11,175
    Here y’all. Forget insurance. Do this. It’s way better. And your church job can easily afford it.
    https://chministries.org
  • There are legitimate reasons why some positions (such as the one I just posted, mea culpa) can't include a salary range. University policy, in my case.
  • MatthewRoth
    Posts: 3,210
    Francis, the problem is that non-insurance programs weasel out of payment more than insurance companies do. Insurance might refuse to pay, but they say so and are supposed to have a good reason within the contractual terms. The health-sharing “ministries” are notorious for not paying bills (because unlike with insurance there is no contract with the doctor) and then not telling patients.

    (I also question how any of this can be “biblical” but anyway…) I wish that it wasn’t the case! But I can’t suggest this.

    Regardless it’s something that employers have to pay for or offer to pay for. And they won’t do that for less than FT in most cases.

    Kevin, right. Dioceses should offer insurance or additional income for purchasing insurance via the exchange (there’s a way to do this; nonprofits do it a lot, for example).
  • TCJ
    Posts: 1,034
    CHMinistries used to be good but they are rapidly going downhill. Massive rate hikes and decreasing the benefits.
  • AbbysmumAbbysmum
    Posts: 105
    There are legitimate reasons why some positions (such as the one I just posted, mea culpa) can't include a salary range. University policy, in my case.


    Maybe because I come from a work culture where wage transparency is enshrined, but being a university, it should be even MORE reason for disclosure/transparency, not less.

    When I started working for the GofC waaay back in 1999, they had just come through court cases where they (the employer) were forced to pay equity to thousands of primarily women employees (a few men, but not many), totaling millions of dollars. Pay transparency was a big part of rectifying the gender equity issues when it came to pay in public service.

    IMO, churches should be similar. I'm giving them money. I would like to know where that money is going. How much does staffing cost? How much does building upkeep cost? These things should not be secret. Pay scales exist for a reason. Organizations like the AGO & RCCO publish annual pay scales so parishes and archdioceses know roughly what a DOM should cost, and budget appropriately.

    Yes, this is my drum and I will keep beating it lol.
    Thanked by 1CHGiffen
  • I don't disagree at all, Abbysmum.
  • kevinfkevinf
    Posts: 1,237
    FYI: The AGO lost a court case over salary guidelines. NPM used to have them but its been a long time.
    Most dioceses do not have pay guidelines. Mostly because the sources of revenue to pay salaries are not balanced from parish to parish. Me, I am paid a lot more than some of my colleagues in my diocese. Is that a problem? In one sense yes and in another no. It depends on how that leadership values someone of my skill set. Some pastors value it greatly. Others, not so much. My pastor values it a lot.

    So the salary depends on the priest. Again, some guidelines would help but one cannot ascertain the same amount in different parts of the country. Guidelines have to be adjusted for cost of living in a paticular place.
  • MatthewRoth
    Posts: 3,210
    The FTC claimed that the AGO scale was anticompetitive. I think that that was wrong on its face. Now pastors have no guidelines to work with.

    We looked at Chicago’s guidelines in the last year, and even for someone stuck in standard OCP/GIA stuff, the pay is abysmal for the work required.

    But neither should tell the whole story or be the last word: some jobs are worth a lot more, and you should even hire a second person.

    And it’s fine if a salary band is posted somewhere. But being upfront is the key.
    Thanked by 1ServiamScores
  • kevinfkevinf
    Posts: 1,237
    Being upfront means you have some knowledge of what it takes to do the work. It really breaks down over that. Some places are better than others.
    As my father would say: it is the way of the world.

    FYI: The AGO guidelines were horrifyingly bad. Way underpaid.....
  • MatthewRoth
    Posts: 3,210
    Well sure!

    Right, I think there’s room between « they’re unfair, and actually favor the employer » and « they’re anticompetitive and no one can publish guidelines » (which, the former may well have been the genesis of the complaint, but the resolution kind of stinks).

  • GambaGamba
    Posts: 641
    https://anglicanmusicians.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/aam_salary_guidelines_2020rev.pdf?v=5

    The Association of Anglican Musicians continued (until more recently) to publish salary guidelines. Above is the final edition published before they too ran scared of the FTC. In this day and age, it’s child’s play to convert a number from that chart into 2025 dollars.

    AAM did just recently publish its periodic survey of wages paid to its members, broken down helpfully into various categories. I hope everyone on this forum is likewise compensated, but I would be surprised. https://anglicanmusicians.org/compensation/

    (The following text is to be read as if it were in a deep dark shade of black, with just a hint of purple:)

    These numbers go to show what happens when parishes are, for all intents and purposes, operated by more-than-advisory parish councils comprised of competent and educated persons. RC diocesan bean counters have no problem decreeing that parish musicians should make $5/hr. Father maxes out at $30k a year himself (forgetting the house, food, car, and medical plan).

    Meanwhile, the Anglican vestry chairman Dr. John S. Wasp (who has a symphony subscription) comprehends that good things cost money. Assistant chair Mx. Cameron Socialjusticewarrior is very concerned about treating workers fairly. And the vestry as a whole is very concerned with protecting their parish’s image, programs, and legacy.

    Better to be tried by twelve than shot by one, as they say.
  • francis
    Posts: 11,175
    Have been with CHM for 10 years and they have paid every single bill over $500 without fail. Not sure where you got your info. None ever refused.
  • AbbysmumAbbysmum
    Posts: 105
    The FTC claimed that the AGO scale was anticompetitive. I think that that was wrong on its face. Now pastors have no guidelines to work with.


    We have no such restrictions in Canada. The largest complaint that I've heard about RCCO guidelines is that they are geared for Protestant churches, so the workload is different for Catholic parishes, especially if you have multiple weekend Masses.

    There's lots of things about you folks in the US that I don't understand due to cultural differences, but the refusal to have transparency and fair pay is near the top of that list. It baffles me that voluntary guidelines would be considered anticompetitive .

    Most dioceses do not have pay guidelines. Mostly because the sources of revenue to pay salaries are not balanced from parish to parish. Me, I am paid a lot more than some of my colleagues in my diocese. Is that a problem? In one sense yes and in another no. It depends on how that leadership values someone of my skill set. Some pastors value it greatly. Others, not so much. My pastor values it a lot.


    That's a good point. Parishes don't have the same resources, and it should be according to parish in the end. It does come down to value. Like the adage goes: everyone loves the arts, but no one likes to pay for them.
  • MatthewRoth
    Posts: 3,210
    Francis, your experience is great, except that it does not take a whole lot of googling to find that people have terrible experiences with virtually all of these health-share programs; insurance is the way that our system works. People don’t have to like it, but it’s the way that it is. And what about your bills under $500? Those would be pretty pesky in my case! I would not want to be fully on the hook for those, which is what you’re suggesting is the case.
  • rich_enough
    Posts: 1,076
    @MatthewRoth
    Not to get too much off on a tangent, but you seem to be referring to healthshares which pay doctors directly, as opposed to ones which pay the participants. I would be wary of the former; my experience with the latter has been like Francis describes.

    I don't doubt that some people have had terrible experiences with healthshares - mine hasn't been 100% positive - but it doesn't take a lot googling to find the same goes for health insurance (or Walt Disney World, or internet forums, or the Catholic Church). At one point I had to choose between an insurance plan which had just added a special rider to pay for contraception and abortion, or a healthshare plan which did not and cost significantly less to boot. My employer was happy to pay the lower monthly cost.

    And yes, they have what amounts to a deductible, but this is as upfront as it is with insurance companies. One interesting thing to consider is that since I'm paying out-of-pocket (uninsured), the hospital charges me significantly less than if I were insured - which itself tells you a lot about why insurance is not necessarily the best system overall.
  • MatthewRoth
    Posts: 3,210
    No, I’m not. I’m referring to both, because there are problems with both. If our standard is that it doesn’t take a lot of googling, then you can find that people have problems with Christian Healthcare Ministries.

    I never said that insurance was a perfect system (I explicitly said that it wasn’t), but insurance is obligated to pay certain bills per the terms of the contract, at the contractual rate; otherwise, you pay that rate, not the cash price (which is sometimes higher than the insurance price). And at the end of the day, insurance companies have to follow certain laws and regulations when they deny services (this is particularly galling when the physician, if there even is one, is not actually a peer expert of the specialist in question, and this is usually when the insurance company folds). CHM is not obligated to reimburse you, and there’s essentially no appeal process.

    Even in deep-red Tennessee the official position of the state government is that these are prone to the problems like the ones I described.

    Healthcare sharing ministries facilitate the sharing of medical expenses and are NOT insurance companies. Neither their guidelines nor plans of operation are insurance policies. If you join a healthcare sharing ministry, whether anyone chooses to assist you with your medical bills will be entirely voluntary. No other participant will be compelled by law to contribute toward your medical bills. Participation in the organization or a subscription to any of its documents should never be considered to be insurance. Regardless of whether you receive any payments for medical expenses or whether this organization continues to operate, you are responsible for the payment of your own medical bills.


    In fact, CHM won’t even forward bills (so you’re in a catch-22: how can you pay a bill that you don’t know about?); insurance is a heavily regulated industry. These are not.

    I can appreciate the distress at paying for abortion and contraceptive services, but this is why dioceses and religious orders, etc. need to have more, not fewer, employees covered to make it worthwhile. Unfortunately, Ascension got out of the insurance business, but they were offering plans without such coverage, because it’s a Catholic company.

    I would argue that it is in the diocese’s best interest to pay for insurance and to heavily discourage healthsharing ministries of any kind.
  • TCJ
    Posts: 1,034
    Doctors and hospitals will not send bills to CHM, so forwarding bills is not an issue. If you are self-pay (which you are when you use CHM), the bills get sent to you, not CHM. There are things to argue about CHM, but that is not one of them.

    Most of my experience with them has been good, but I don't like that in the past five years they have been raising their rates drastically and reducing what they will do for you. I'd appreciate it if they'd just say "costs are going up and we have to raise prices. We're sorry about it, but there's nothing we can do". Instead CHM has been sending letters telling us why it's so GOOD for us that we have to pay more and get less. CHM, be honest. It's the biblical way!
    Thanked by 1rich_enough
  • tandrews
    Posts: 207
    Nothing to contribute, I just keep reading the title as "Salieri's..."
  • MatthewRoth
    Posts: 3,210
    TCJ, except that people and doctors’ offices or hospitals mess this up all the time.

    However, what I did not realize was that on Feb of 2025 Team Health (physician billing) had contacted CHM by mail issuing a request for payment for a physician bill, in regards to my labor and delivery in Dec 2024. Team Health said there was no response from CHM in February. I was told over the phone by CHM that if there were any requests from hospitals or outside billing they would redirect them to contact me. This did not happen. So now 8 months later we just received a bill from team health for labor and delivery charges. I’ve spoken with several people at Team Health and they have on record that they never heard anything back from CHM until July of 2025, 6 months after they sent the initial bill. Of course by then we were no longer members of CHM.


    Source. If they bill the wrong insurance company, they’ll eventually either eat the bill, or the insurance company will pay, so long as it’s submitted in a timely manner (even if later than usual), even after your coverage ends (which is already the case at the beginning of the year for many people).

    And again: they just get to pick and choose what’s eligible. There’s no real appeal process. There’s nothing binding them to follow their own guidelines.
  • TCJ
    Posts: 1,034
    CHM does not pay hospitals or doctors directly. There is no way a doctor or hospital is going to bill them UNLESS the person involved makes a major mistake (and doesn't understand policies). I read through a bunch of the Google reviews on CHM, many of them bad. I can pick through a bunch of them that show that whoever wrote them didn't bother to read any of their policies.

    Again, there are problems with CHM, but the example above is not one caused by them.
    Thanked by 2francis rich_enough
  • francis
    Posts: 11,175
    MatthewRoth

    I think you are going on bad information
  • rich_enough
    Posts: 1,076
    Have to agree with TCJ here - what MatthewRoth describes is not my experience and not how my healthshare operates. I simply tell the hospital I'm uninsured (I don't even mention that I'm part of a healthshare) and they send me the bills, which I then forward to the healthshare. I've always been reimbursed in full (minus the "deductible"). I have also been consistently discounted across the board for hospital services - sometimes as much as 30% - though not for other things such as an ambulance.

    It's not a perfect system - nothing is - and it can be hassles on my end, but it's significantly less than insurance.
  • MatthewRoth
    Posts: 3,210
    « Whatever » is basically the suitable response, since the thread was hijacked to promote one specific form of thing that I also feel strongly about in the opposite direction.

    CHM filters the bill so that if it’s sent by the wrong person, it’s not seen, but then you can’t pay a bill that you don’t know about. That is CHM’s fault, as I said. Is it that hard to understand?

    And you all picked on insurance as if I didn’t acknowledge that there are legitimate criticisms, but regardless, insurance has a contract, healthshare ministries of any kind do not.
  • TCJ
    Posts: 1,034
    Hospitals do not bill CHM. When you sign up for CHM, you read VERY CLEARLY in their policy that you do declare yourself SELF-PAY. If you tell a hospital you are self-pay, they (surprise, surprise!) bill YOU.

    If anything else occurs, it is the result of the member not being aware of CHM policies and misinforming the hospital. What part of that is so hard to understand?

    As I said, there are plenty of things you can criticize CHM about. The one you are making the biggest fuss about is not an issue except for people who sign up for things but don't read instructions.
  • MatthewRoth
    Posts: 3,210
    As I said, whatever. Francis hijacked the thread and here we are.

    What part of that is so hard to understand?


    What part of everything wherein I explained that CHM makes it worse for the member is so hard to understand????
  • francis
    Posts: 11,175
    MatthewRoth

    I don’ agree that I hijacked the discussion. Insurance is an important part of a church job, and I was simply mentioning an alternative for those who can’t get it. Just saying.
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  • TCJ
    Posts: 1,034
    CHM doesn't really make anything harder. What happens is you have to manage your own bills. That means you need to be aware of what is being billed, who is billing you, when you expect them, etc. Yes, it is a lot of work -- I've been there. I kept a spreadsheet of bills for the birth of a child and was frequently in contact with the hospital to be sure I was on top of things. Thing is, if you were self-pay WITHOUT CHM you'd still have to do that. In other words, they are expecting you to be responsible for your own stuff, but they reimburse you. The only thing that is harder on you is that you now have to send in your bills to them (after YOU receive them).

    I suppose the idea of being responsible for one's own bills is a bit hard for people to understand these days, but that isn't CHM's problem. That's the person who needs to learn responsibility. My guess is they have issues in many places that require responsibility, it's just medical bills tend to hit harder than a lot of other stuff. People need to stop with the idea that other people need to do everything to take care of them even once they become adults.

    BTW, personal experience with CHM: everything has been smooth with the bill sharing portion. Never had them refuse anything that wasn't specifically stated in their policies and they have shared a few things which I thought they would refuse. Again, not happy with some other stuff, but that's not what you're complaining about.
  • I don’ agree that I hijacked the discussion. Insurance is an important part of a church job, and I was simply mentioning an alternative for those who can’t get it. Just saying.

    I’m just going to repost this section of Canon Law here.
    Can. 231 §1. Lay persons who permanently or temporarily devote themselves to special service of the Church are obliged to acquire the appropriate formation required to fulfill their function properly and to carry out this function conscientiously, eagerly, and diligently.

    §2. Without prejudice to the prescript of can. 230, §1 and with the prescripts of civil law having been observed, lay persons have the right to decent remuneration appropriate to their condition so that they are able to provide decently for their own needs and those of their family. They also have a right for their social provision, social security, and health benefits to be duly provided.
  • LarsLars
    Posts: 134
    "lay persons have the right to decent remuneration appropriate to their condition so that they are able to provide decently for their own needs and those of their family. They also have a right for their social provision, social security, and health benefits to be duly provided."

    - except if they are given a contract to sign which specifically says they will get none of those things.
    Thanked by 1francis
  • tandrews
    Posts: 207
    Keyword: "decently"
    Thanked by 1Liam
  • - except if they are given a contract to sign which specifically says they will get none of those things

    Do you try to negotiate your contract for better terms, or just sign it and grumble about it?

    Thanked by 1Lars
  • LarsLars
    Posts: 134
    didn't sign it , but still like to grumble about it occasionally.
  • As the head of a household of eight I will vouch for CHM, as well as for doing one's own research with regard to personal and familial health and wellness.

    I will refrain from saying more because I could go on for years.
  • As the head of a household of eight I will vouch for CHM, as well as for doing one's own research with regard to personal and familial health and wellness

    I’m just grateful I live in Canada and don’t have to worry about paying for healthcare or ridiculously expensive insurance and co-pay for the most part between provincial health insurance and employer extended health and dental benefits.
  • incantuincantu
    Posts: 992
    FWIW California, Colorado, Connecticut, Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, Vermont, and Washington require employers to include salary ranges in job postings. If it’s likely or even possible that a particular position would attract someone from out of state, it would be a best practice to post salary ranges for all. As we all know, compensation is almost never “commensurate” with experience.
  • We've used Samaritan ministries for 12 years now, without ever having trouble of any kind with bills large and small. I would say these alternative ministries are critically important to the salary discussion because (at least in my diocese) the HALF of a family insurance premium that the employee pays years ago surpassed our mortgage as the largest expense in the budget. I honestly do not know how I would afford this line of work without an alternative and vastly cheaper insurance solution (and I make a very reasonable salary). Both pastors and workers should know about these options in the salary discussion.

    I negotiated our exit to Samaritan myself - no one forced me into it. And in the process both the parish and my family saved large amounts of money every year.
    Thanked by 1rich_enough
  • MatthewRoth
    Posts: 3,210
    That also sounds like the diocese needs to get its act together more than anything.