糖心Vlog

ANU鈥檚 stand-in vice-chancellor gets A$180,000 pay rise

Institution鈥檚 provost also gains access to on-campus residence after stepping up to replace former leader who left amid funding crisis

Published on
October 24, 2025
Last updated
October 25, 2025
Rebekah Brown Australian National University
Source: ANU

The stand-in boss at the troubled Australian National University (ANU) will receive a A$180,000 (拢88,000) pay rise to step up from her substantive position as provost, the institution has revealed.

Interim vice-chancellor Rebekah Brown will also be granted occupancy of a two-storey house on the edge of the university鈥檚 leafy Canberra campus.

A on ANU鈥檚 website reveals that Brown will receive a salary of A$950,000 during her stint as interim leader, and will have her term as provost and senior vice-president extended by the amount of time she spends in the top job. An additional A$30,000 in superannuation will raise her package to almost A$1 million.

The university said her salary as provost was A$800,000, including superannuation.

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Brown has also been granted an 鈥渆xercisable option鈥 to live temporarily in the vice-chancellor鈥檚 on-campus residence. The stately 1950s house has not been occupied since the turn of the century and has been used exclusively to host university events.

An ANU spokesman said Brown, like all previous vice-chancellors, had the option to live in the residence. 鈥淚f she chooses this option, she will pay rent privately at a rate that has been independently assessed.鈥

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ANU said it was revealing Brown鈥檚 remuneration as part of its 鈥渟tandard disclosure practices鈥. The Canberra institution has published its payments to its key management personnel in detail since 2019, unlike most Australian universities, which report only the total amounts paid to unidentified executives within bands of A$10,000 or A$15,000.

All Australian universities may soon be forced to follow ANU鈥檚 lead in publishing breakdowns of their senior executives鈥 pay packages, under recommendations from the Expert Council on University Governance.

ANU chancellor Julie Bishop was less forthcoming about the severance package granted to former vice-chancellor Genevieve Bell, when quizzed on the matter during a 10 October Senate estimates committee meeting.

Bishop told Canberra senator David Pocock that the resignation package awarded to Bell had been 鈥渨hat she was entitled to under the contract of engagement鈥 and was 鈥減ersonal and confidential information鈥.

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ANU on 11 September that Bell was 鈥渢endering her resignation鈥. The Australian Financial Review that the university council had voted to end Bell鈥檚 tenure during a special meeting the previous evening. The university has not clarified whether she left voluntarily or was pushed, despite repeated questions from 糖心Vlog.听

Pocock asked why Bell had received a payout if she had resigned. Bishop indicated that the circumstances of departure had little bearing on university leaders鈥 entitlements to termination packages.

鈥淚t鈥檚 in the contract of employment,鈥 the chancellor told the committee. 鈥淚f someone resigns鈥hey can be paid in lieu of notice. You can give notice that you鈥檙e going to leave in six months鈥 time and get paid your salary, or you can resign effective immediately and take the salary.鈥

john.ross@timeshighereducation.com

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