Two University of Massachusetts employees took home more than $1 million in 2019, topping the comptroller’s list of state employee pay for the year.

University of Massachusetts Medical School chancellor and senior vice president of health sciences Michael Collins earned $1.096 million, while dean of UMass Medical School Terence Flotte, who is also provost and executive deputy chancellor, took home $1.076 million.

As usual, UMass employees dominated the top of the state payroll, with all but one of the 65 highest-paid employees working for UMass. Only a portion of the UMass budget comes from tax dollars, though.

The highest state earner not working for UMass was chief medical examiner Mindy Hull, who earned more than $395,000. Hull’s office came under scrutiny last year when the Boston Globe reported that it was in danger of losing accreditation — although the department was ultimately able to keep it.

MBTA General Manager Steven Poftak, who was hired into that position in January 2019, earned $312,600 overseeing an agency that has struggled to accelerate its capital repairs while maintaining safety.

There were 931 state workers who earned more than $200,000 last year. In some cases, employees’ wages are boosted by significant chunks of overtime pay.

Two MBTA forepersons and wirepersons — John Devlin and Stephen Mitchell — each earned more than $190,000 in overtime pay, the highest overtime sums in state government. Both of those workers had base salaries of around $115,000, so their overtime pay more than doubled their compensation.

Search the full database below.

Search tips:

Use the Name, Department or Title fields to begin your search.

The database will return results for partial information in any field. For example, entering the term “Transitional” in the Department field will return all results for the Department of Transitional Assistance. Searching for “smith” in the “Name” field will return all employees whose first or last names contain “smith.” The search fields are not case sensitive.

To see the entire database, leave all fields blank and click the "Search" button.

After the database performs the search, the page will reload. You may need to scroll back down the page to view the results.

Sort your results by clicking on or tapping a column header. The default display sorts results on the "Total pay" column, from high to low.

Click the “Details” link for any individual to see a breakdown of base pay, overtime pay, buyout pay and more.

Related: Massachusetts state employee salary database 2019