2003
Compensation Guidelines for MACUCC Clergy
Approved
at the 203rd Annual Meeting, June 7-8, 2002
For
use with Clergy Compensation
Booklet available from the Commission on Leadership Development,
MACUCC
The
203rd Annual Meeting of the Massachusetts Conference of the
United Church of Christ, concerned with the growth of its
churches and the compensation of its ordained leaders, recommends
that all congregations meet the goals as outlined in Guidelines
for Clergy Compensation. The guidelines apply to all
full-time pastors, associates and assistants, both settled
and interim.
Because
the pastor of a church is required by the Associations of
the Massachusetts Conference, United Church of Christ to
be a highly educated and trained professional, the salary
and housing package for pastors should be congruent with
the compensation of other similarly trained professionals
in the community. The total compensation package could be
considered at least equal to that of professionals requiring
three or more years of post graduate training such as school
superintendents, secondary and middle school principals,
engineers and other professionals in administrative positions,
showing consideration for years of service, special skills
and training, and natural aptitude. The federal tax structure
is unique for clergy, and the compensation package should
be designed in such a way as to maximize the pastor's income.
The
work schedules and compensation packages of local pastors
should be healthy for the pastor and for the church. That
would require a balance of time spent in the church's
ministry and time spent with family and friends - a balance of
work and recreation, a balance of exercising the body
and the mind, a balance of care of others and care
for self.
Some
churches, because of their smaller membership and/or financial
constraints, may be unable to provide an adequate compensation
package for full-time pastoral service. They are encouraged
to meet with the Area Minister and/or Stewardship and Financial
Planning Consultants from the Conference to review their
situation. They may consider creative options, such as calling
a part-time, bi-vocational pastor or sharing a pastor with
another congregation in the area in order to combine resources
to offer adequate compensation. A congregation should not
expect a pastor to work full-time for part-time compensation.
Be
it resolved that the 203rd annual meeting recommends:
- Churches
pay a minimum entry-level cash salary according to the
following table for a full-time pastor;
- Churches
provide either:
a.
a PARSONAGE with a furnishings allowance, all utilities,
and an equity development plan which will
ensure the pastor has housing assets in retirement;
or
b. a CASH PACKAGE sufficient to allow the minister to buy, furnish and
maintain a median-priced house in the church's community; the minimum cash
package shall be no less than 1/100 per month of the value of a median-priced
home in the community; (for example: if a median-priced house in a community
is $150,000, the church's minimum cash package for housing would be $1,500
per month, or $18,000 per annum)
- Full
benefits and professional expenses be provided, as listed
below; benefits and professional expenses are not to
be considered part of the cash salary, but are part of
the cost of having an ordained minister;
- Churches
already at or above the minimum and also fully providing
all benefits and professional expenses as outlined below
give at least a cost of living increase and consider a
merit increase also;
- The
work schedule of local pastors be a maximum average of
40-50 hours per week with no more than 3 evenings in a
given week; in addition, pastors take at least 1½ days
off per week.
CASH
SALARY RANGES
The
cash salary ranges do NOT include housing, benefits, professional
or any other expenses. In calculating years of ordained experience,
churches may wish to include other relevant life and work
experience.
| Number
of Church Members |
Years
of Ordained Experience
|
|
0
-3
|
4
- 10
|
over
10
|
|
0
- 150
|
$25,500
- $37,740
|
$27,540
- $40,800
|
$29,580
- $43,860
|
|
150
- 300
|
$25,500
- $39,780
|
$29,070
- $43,095
|
$31,620
- $46,920
|
|
300
- 500
|
$25,500
- $41,820
|
$31,620
- $46,920
|
$36,720
- $54,060
|
|
500
- 1,000
|
$25,500
- $44,880
|
$34,680
- $51,510
|
$41,820
- $62,220
|
|
over
1,000
|
$25,500
- $45,900
|
$37,740
- $56,100
|
$46,920
- $69,870
|
BENEFITS
AND PROFESSIONAL EXPENSES
A.
SOCIAL SECURITY ALLOWANCE
Since
clergy are treated as self-employed for social security purposes,
pastors must pay the current 15.3% on the cash salary plus housing
allowance or on cash salary plus the fair market rental value
of the parsonage plus utilities. Therefore it is recommended
that churches pay 7.65% of the pastor's salary plus housing
allowance or, where a parsonage is provided, 7.65% of fair
market rental value plus cost of utilities for social security.
This is taxable income which must be reported on a clergy
person's tax returns.
B.
BENEFITS
- annuity -
minimum of 14% of base salary plus housing allowance (or
minimum of 14% of 130% of base salary if parsonage is provided)
paid quarterly to the UCC Pension Board1
- life
insurance and disability benefit plan -
disability income insurance and decreasing term life
insurance through UCC program; cost is 1% of base salary
plus housing allowance or, where a parsonage is provided,
of 130% of base salary
- group
life insurance - additional decreasing term life
insurance available through the Pension Boards for $50
per year
- medical/dental
insurance - available through the UCC Pension Boards
- holiday
and vacation time - usual holidays (or compensation
time) and 4 weeks vacation per year
- continuing
education time
- sabbatical
time and funds
- sick
time
- maternity/paternity
leave, including for adoption
For
more detail, see Clergy Compensation Booklet
C.
PROFESSIONAL COSTS
Tax
law allows deduction of business expenses on Schedule A only
after the minister has spent more than 2% of family adjusted
gross income on such expenses. THEREFORE it is important
that a church establish an "Accountable Reimbursement Plan" which
will reimburse or pay directly all costs which the pastor
incurs for "doing business" for the church, so that the pastor
is not paying income tax for church expenses. These should
include but not be limited to:
- auto
reimbursement - for use of personal car at current
IRS rate plus tolls and parking, or an automobile provided
by the church
- professional
expenses - all expenses allowed by the IRS
- continuing
education allowance
For
more detail see Clergy Compensation Booklet

For
reference, the following is an illustration of what is
needed to fund the POSITION of a pastor (salary, housing,
AND benefits and professional expenses) for a minister
with 12 years experience, receiving a mid-range salary,
serving in a church with 150-300 members:
| COMPENSATION: |
|
salary:
|
$39,270 |
housing
allowance (for those not in a parsonage, $150,000
house)
|
18,360 |
| BENEFITS: |
|
annuity
(salary + housing x 14%) 1
|
8,131 |
life
insurance and disability benefit plan (salary +
housing x 1%)
|
581 |
group
life insurance
|
50 |
medical/dental
insurance (family plan)
|
10,404 |
social
security offset (salary + housing x 7.65%) 2
|
4,443 |
| PROFESSIONAL
COSTS |
|
professional
expenses
|
1,500 |
continuing
education
|
750 |
auto
reimbursement (14,000
miles/year @ $.365/mile)
|
5,110 |
| total
needed to fund the position of minister |
$89,049 |
It
is understood that some churches may not be able to meet
these guidelines immediately, and may need instead to institute
them over a period of 3-5 years. It will be important in
these instances to project a cost of living increase for
each year and to make the necessary projection of total
dollars above where the compensation package is at present.
Then simply divide by the number of years it will take
to reach the goal, and increase by that figure the annual
compensation package over the 3-5 year period.
1 This
is the standard formula recommended by the UCC Pension
Boards for calculating the annual church contribution to
a pastor's annuity. However, in some specific situations
where a pastor's compensation package is heavily weighted
toward a housing allowance, a tax accountant should be
consulted to assure that the annuity payment does not exceed
the maximum percent of taxable compensation allowed by
the IRS for contribution to a 403(b) tax sheltered annuity.
2 This
is taxable income which must be included with taxable wages
on the W-2 form given to the pastor and reported on a clergyperson's
tax returns.
|