The CEO of Non-Profit MLC Bags $700,000 Salary In 2022 as CFO Annual Compensation Tops $500,000, Tax Disclosures Show
Mechanical Licensing Collective CEO Kris Ahrend earned a healthy $699,449 during 2022, according to newly surfaced tax disclosures. Photo Credit: Mackenzie Marco
Mechanical Licensing Collective (MLC) CEO Kris Ahrend earned just shy of $700,000 during 2022, while other higher-ups pulled down sizable salaries in their own right, according to newly released tax disclosures. The MLCâs 2022 federal tax filings have now surfaced, shedding light on the compensation of CEO Kris Ahrend as well as CFO Ilene Weintraub, chief legal officer Kristen Johns, and chief marketing officer Ellen Truley, among others. The IRS filings were shared with Digital Music News this week, and represent the most recent disclosures from the non-profit agency.
Diving into the appropriate figures, Ahrendâs 2022 salary totaled $699,449: $664,383 in core pay from the MLC and the remaining $35,066 attributable to âother compensation from the organization and related organizations,â per the documents. Predictably, Ahrend took home more than any other MLC exec on the year.
Nevertheless, Weintraub secured a healthy $506,175 overall, the filing shows, against $398,498 for Johns and a decidedly substantial $362,861 for the marketing professional Truley. Spread across 52 weeks, Ahrendâs salary comes out to $13,451 weekly and, factoring for the identified average of 40 hours per week he turned in throughout the stretch, north of $336 per hour.
Mechanical Licensing Collective Top Salaries of 2022CEO Kris Ahrend â $699,449CFO Ilene Weintraub â $506,175Chief legal officer Kristen Johns â $398,498Chief marketing officer Ellen Truley â $362,861Head of rights management Maurice Russell â $304,300Head of analytics and automation Andrew Mitchell â $258,417Head of finance Monique Benjamin â $245,605Assistant general counsel Nathan Osher â $243,018Chief people officer Leigh McCorkle â $242,786CTO/CIO Richard Thompson â $230,290While perhaps not completely outrageous â higher-ups at certain other government-mandated entities boast larger salaries than even Ahrend â these figures will undoubtedly elicit pushback from music industry corners.
Designated by the Copyright Office to administer the blanket license established under 2018âs Music Modernization Act (MMA), the MLC is, after all, a non-profit. And not factoring for their extremely lucrative endeavors outside of office, members of Congress make $174,000 yearly, compared to $400,000 for the president.Furthermore, what appears the likeliest music industry response to the massive paydays wonât be helped by the MLCâs growing tranche of unmatched âblack boxâ royalties, including (as of 2022) $415.44 million in identified âhistorical unmatched royalties,â $143.99 million in âblanket unmatched royalties,â $107.95 million in âblanket unclaimed royalties,â and $6.17 million in âblanket held royalties,â according to the tax disclosures.
To date, the exact status of this as-yet-unpaid capital has prompted some questions from lawmakers â with its ultimate destination (assuming it doesnât end up reaching the rightful recipients) remaining the subject of greater controversy yet.Itâs against this backdrop that the MLC, which per the tax document attributed $15.28 million to âinvestment incomeâ (with $14.59 million specifically from interest on the pile of unmatched and unclaimed royalties) for 2022, tapped several proper companies in December to form a âSupplemental Matching Network.â
The start of that effort to more effectively match royalties preceded the announcement of the first audit of the MLC, which is itself auditing digital service providers including Spotify and Apple Music. And beyond these multifaceted occurrences, the MLC is suing Pandora over alleged unpaid royalties â as the Copyright Office reviews the MLCâs aforesaid designation under the MMA.
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