A well-deserved raise for teachers
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In past weeks, news from neighboring school districts has been far
from the kind most administrators hope to see in the newspaper. In
the South Orange County Community College District, the faculty gave
a no confidence vote to Chancellor Raghu Mathur. In Westminster, the
school board has been bitterly and publicly divided over state
antidiscrimination laws that protect transsexuals and others who do
not conform to traditional gender roles.
And then there’s the Newport-Mesa Unified School District.
On Tuesday night, without a fight, without shouts, without a
seeming complaint, the board of trustees approved a labor agreement
that gives teachers a raise of more than 5% over the next two years,
putting their salaries in line with others in the county. In the
fall, starting pay for credentialed teachers will go from $38,062 to
$40,000 a year. Salaries for teachers with a master’s degree, 75
additional credit hours of study and at least 28 years at the
district will top out at $82,878. The previous high salary was
$81,173. For the 2005-06 school year, salaries will start at $40,104
and go up to $83,978.
The goal is to raise pay to the top quarter of schools in the
county, said Jim Rogers, president of the Newport-Mesa Federation of
Teachers.
Our teachers deserve it. As is so often said, though perhaps never
enough, teachers fill crucial roles in our community: They are in
charge of shepherding our children to adulthood. Many spend long,
extra hours to make sure they can give their best in the classroom.
They comprise, by and large, a dedicated group who have our
children’s best interests at heart. They deserve the compensation for
their hard work.
The school district deserves praise for a fine bit of shepherding
of its own. Often, negotiations over contracts create fault lines
that are difficult to repair. There is no indication of any such
breakdown here.
It isn’t that there’s a lack of money -- typically the central
cause of such conflict -- involved. Overall, under the new contract,
salary and benefits in 2004-05 in Newport-Mesa will increase by 3.54%
and cost the district $2.6 million. In 2005-06, they will increase by
1.82%, or $1.4 million.
And it all is happening smoothly and all to everyone’s benefit.
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