The disgraced former head of the Queens Library, once accused of turning the non-profit into his personal piggy bank, is not only collecting a six-figure state pension, he’s cashing a fat paycheck from a Long Island school district.

Thomas Galante’s pension came to $248,102, putting him in the top 10 highest earners in the New York State and Local Retirement System last year, according to new figures released by the Empire Center.

Galante, who was fired by the library in December 2014, is able to collect the taxpayer-funded pension because the Queens Library is primarily funded with public money and employees are eligible to join the state pension system.

And he is able to work for Elmont School District — and skirt state rules that prohibit double-dipping by pension recipients — because he is being paid as a consultant, not a district employee.

Al Harper, the district superintendent, said Galante is paid about $200,000 a year as a “business consultant.” He said he had no qualms about his past.

“That was between him and his previous employer,” Harper said.

With almost half a million dollars in income pouring in every year, Galante positioned himself to make even more cash by putting his stately circa-1820 Colonial in leafy Wilton, Conn., up for rent for $3,700 a month, according to a real estate listing. The house is valued at almost $700,000. It is unclear where he currently lives. He owns two small boats.

Galante, 57, also lived large as president of the Queens Library, where he had worked for nearly 28 years, the last 11 as CEO.

While the library slashed staff, Galante pulled down nearly $400,000 a year and spent $140,000 in library money on office renovations — including a private smoking deck.

After news of the wild spending surfaced in 2014, the FBI and other agencies launched probes into Galante, but he was never charged.

City Comptroller Scott Stringer found that Galante charged $670,000 to a library credit card that was not approved by the non-profit.

He spent $1,962 for Maroon 5 concert tickets, $100 for specialty ashtrays, $174 for tickets to Disneyland, $1,000 in airplane seat upgrades and $200 on Apple TVs for his “home office,” Stringer reported.

Galante was also double-dipping while he was library CEO, moonlighting for the Elmont schools and charging up to $187.33 an hour, Stringer’s report found. The school system paid him as much as $203,250 a year.

After he was canned, Galante sued the library in federal court to get severance pay he said he was owed.

The library counter-sued and demanded Galante return its property, including a computer and iPad. The library eventually agreed to drop its claim and settle

the suit for $1.5 million with $300,000 going to Galante and the rest to cover his legal bills.

Galante began collecting his pension in 2015. He is among 4,573 retirees including those from state government, counties, and towns, who got six-figure payouts in the 2018 fiscal year, a 20 percent jump over the previous year, according to the Empire Center.

He could not be reached for comment.