Tentative Contract Agreement by Seattle teachers and Seattle Public Schools
As of about 10:30 pm last night, a tentative agreement has been made. Announcement from SPS.
School will start as planned next week.
SEA membership to vote next Wednesday.
Details as they become available.
School will start as planned next week.
SEA membership to vote next Wednesday.
Details as they become available.
Comments
The tentative agreement proposes a 10.5 % raise, is that on the base pay or tri pay? or the full salary?
http://view.email.seattletimes.com/?qs=883bd3374f36c095c0c218eb1f34f21b20034410293335c61fb19afc07dafec6eed3771f779a7d575fc27382bb0e9f081a2dbe37e8894cef9887d8bd1ddefe7edbef2349936bec25bf0a6d6cb58ed9e6
Moriarty
So not including any changes in status (years in service or "lane change" with more college credit, etc) a person making, say, $80,000 last year (base and tri) would make $88,500 this year - 10.5% more.
Sub
PS. Vote No.
- Caphill Parent
The proposed 10.5% salary increase will trigger layoffs.
SEA will be back next year.
Sen. Christine Rolfes, D-Bainbridge Island said last week that the Legislature shouldn’t be micromanaging local negotiations. “It’s their responsibility to have stable budgets,” she said.
Students got 4.5 school days.
Enjoy.
How much per year do you think Seattle educators should make?
Is 100k too much, in your opinion?
You appear to be bemoaning these salary increases (that many people believe bring Seattle educators towards a real-world salary) but don't tell us why they should make less.
How do YOU think Seattle should attract the best teachers, when other districts pay more and have lower costs of living?
Teachers are free to seek employment in Edmonds, but Edmonds over-extended themselves and are at risk of laying off teachers. Teachers moving to Edmonds would risk loosing seniority and receiving pink slips.
The state caps high end teacher salaries at $90K. Funding models will not favor those with seniority- something I oppose. I believe future funding will push funds out of Seattle, as well.
My question is how will Seattle close a funding gap that now appears around $122M.