Teachers, district not yet agreed
Danette Goulet
NEWPORT-MESA - Teacher and district negotiators failed to sign an
agreement Thursday that would provide teachers with a 9% across-the-board
pay increase, but negotiators said the delay was purely technical.
“You do want to read it over like 10 times,” Supt. Robert Barbot said
of the contract. “I think we’re all feeling good about the outcome in the
meantime. It’s looking positive and we hope it will be the right thing
for our teachers -- they deserve it.”
As they prepare to sign off on about $4 million worth of salary
increases for teachers -- which would bring the average salary in
Newport-Mesa just above the $53,000 mean for unified districts in Orange
County -- teachers’ negotiators are trying to get the district’s
guarantee that salaries won’t be allowed to fall below the average again.
To do that, on top of the 9% raise, the district will give teachers a
share of any uncommitted money received during the year, said Linda Mook,
president of the Newport-Mesa Teachers Federation.
That additional funding, Mook said, would be any cost of living
increase that may come in through the state.
“Basically, the district can’t commit dollars that it doesn’t have,
and we want to maintain all the great programs that we have, so the only
source of funding to keep teachers salaries competitive is additional
money,” Mook said. “We don’t have an interest in harming any programs.”
There are other, less glamorous pieces to the contract puzzle, one
being an additional year of previous work experience credit for new
teachers, bringing the number with which they are credited from six to
seven.
Another contract point provides a greater flexibility to district
officials when transferring a limited number of teachers to improve the
learning environment at a school.
It also outlines a teacher evaluation program that is in line with new
state laws and education codes.
Finally, it includes school district participation in two state
programs that will give them nearly $600,000 in state dollars.
The first program will provide $190,000 to raise salaries for
beginning teachers in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District from
$30,163 to $33,100 -- just below the county average of $33,347.
Teacher and district negotiation teams also agreed in June to begin
the peer assistance and review program, which was proposed by Gov. Gray
Davis. The peer program will cost about $400,000 to start up, Mook said.
It will replace the defunct teacher mentor program.
“We expect to sign the contract tomorrow,” Mook said. “Most of the
holdup is on numbering sections of contract and technical things. There
are no major points that we don’t agree on.”
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