Ponte Vedra Soccer Club official benched over pay

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Updated: 11/13/2012 6:45 pm

PONTE VEDRA BEACH Fla. -- There's an empty spot on the sidelines on the Ponte Vedra Soccer Club's practice field. One of the club's stars, coaching director, Trey Clark, has been benched indefinitely, all because of a dispute over his paycheck. Parents say the whole issue is bad teamwork on the part of the association.

Clark's attorney tells Action News the Ponte Vedra Athletic Association stopped paying him three months ago. The reason? They say his high salary jeopardizes the club's 501C3 status. He says they're using the not-for-profit issue to get rid of Clark.

"The problem is we have a written contract that was approved by the soccer club board as to what Trey's compensation was supposed to be," said Clark's attorney, Gregg Gerlach.

According to Clark's contract, obtained by Action News, the organization agreed to pay him $54,000 a year, plus perks and incentives. His attorney says that's not out of the ordinary for a 501C3 employee. He also claims Ponte Vedra Athletic Association never got an opinion from a CPA or tax lawyer that supports such a claim and that's why they're taking legal action.

In response to Clark's claims, Ponte Vedra Athletic Association provided Action News with this statement:

"It is regretful that our athletic community have been subjected to such false claims and I look forward to seeing these issues resolved so that we can get back to what is important, fostering and encouraging interest and participation in athletics for the youth in our community." -John Lazzara, PVAA President

The issue goes to mediation on Nov. 30. Clark had been working even without pay for several months. but at a Monday night meeting, the Association put a stop to that by suspending him and changing the locks to club equipment.

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pvscarlett - 11/15/2012 1:02 PM
0 Votes
My daughter was a club athelete for several years and for the best coaches and program it cost me about $6K a year. If winning and development of highly competitive skill sets are not priorities, then it becomes less necesary to hire a coach for more than $20K. Coach Clark’s teams have won over 95% of every tournament entered at the State, Regional and National Level. He's a very good coach and more often than not, you get what you pay for. Having said that, $50K is a middle class salary. In Ponte Vedra, it might even be on the lower end of middle class.

Getagrip - 11/15/2012 8:55 AM
0 Votes
The scariest part about this story is that the parties had a mediation date set for November 30th, and the two boards PVAA/PVSC chose to create an environment to publicly humilate Mr. Clark prior to mediation. Both boards sat in that meeting taking no responsibility for their poor decisions and lack of financial controls over not only PVSC but all the sports clubs in Ponte Vedra under the PVAA. Both Boards need to be shut down and the members are owed a new election. I imagine if the IRS gets wind of any of this everything will be shut down. PVAA should not even have the 501C3 status based on the fact that they are required to audit annually and never have until 2010. If they did their job then no one would be in this situation. Every parent on PVSC better wake up - there will be no operating funds this spring - their money is going to pay for attorneys - because the Board Members on both Boards have been sitting there doing nothing to resolve this.

pvbmom - 11/14/2012 12:49 PM
0 Votes
i have to wonder if i, or another concerned parent -- opposed to TC's attorney -- had called you with the scoop, would we be reading very different articles? 99.9% of the pvsc membership are good people, who just want a place for their kids to play soccer. fundamentally, TC and the excessive nature of his compensation, were putting that in jeopardy. disappointed parents, coming together in an attempt to challenge an overpaid coach who's intentionally exploited his position as a youth sports ambassador for excessive financial gain, threatening the organizations finances and morale in the process. that's the real story here. to report that he was a "club star", or "popular" figure within the club is simply negligent on your part ANJ.com.
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