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Bill Ford To Get Paid

After?five-year wage freeze,?Ford Motor Co.'s Executive Chairman?will be paid $4 million in salary and stock options with a current value of $11 million to $12 million.

DETROIT (AP) -- After a five-year wage freeze, Ford Motor Co. Executive Chairman Bill Ford Jr. is getting paid again.

It's another sign that the automaker founded by his great-grandfather Henry Ford is healthy enough to award its top executives generous pay packages. The company recently said it earned $2.6 billion in the second quarter, its fifth-straight quarterly profit.

Bill Ford will be paid $4 million in salary and in stock options with a current value of $11 million to $12 million. The total represents pay he has earned over the last two years.

"The ongoing success of Ford Motor Company is my life's work and I am fully confident we are on track for sustained profitable growth through our commitment to building great products, a strong business and a better world," Bill Ford said in an e-mail to employees obtained by The Associated Press.

In 2005, when Bill Ford was chairman and chief executive, he stopped taking a salary or bonus as the automaker floundered and racked up record losses. The following year, he stepped aside as chief executive and hired former Boeing Co. CEO Alan Mulally for the job. Mulally has been widely credited with streamlining the company and turning its operations around.

In 2008, Ford's compensation committee ruled that Bill Ford could be paid from the beginning of 2008 on once the company's automotive operations returned to profitability. The committee recently decided those conditions have been met. Ford made $2.7 billion in 2009, its first annual profit in four years.

Mulally made $17.9 million in 2009, about 1 percent more than the prior year. Most of that total was in stock options; his salary was $1.4 million. Mulally took a 30 percent salary cut in 2008 that remains in effect.

Mulally's salary has been a sticking point for some of the company's factory workers, who cited his pay when they rejected a new round of wage concessions last October.

In a filing Friday with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Bill Ford also said he is selling $28 million worth of shares. In the e-mail to employees, Ford said he is selling the stock to pay off personal loans he took out in recent years to purchase Ford shares.

He also said he is donating $1 million to a college scholarship fund for employees' children.

In afternoon trading, Ford shares lost 1 cent to $3.33.

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