Teachers get tentative 6% raise
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Deirdre Newman
NEWPORT-MESA -- Teachers and officials in the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District have reached a tentative agreement for a salary raise,
with both sides crediting a spirit of collaboration for producing the
accord.
The two-year agreement, agreed to Friday, calls for a 6% raise for
this school year, a 3% raise for the 2002-03 school year and a host of
other changes, including an increase in medical benefits.
The teachers will vote on the agreement Nov. 30. If it is ratified,
the pay hike would increase the average teacher salary in the district
from about $53,400 to about $56,600.
Linda Mook, president of the Newport-Mesa Teachers Federation, hailed
the agreement and voiced guarded optimism that it would pass.
“We’ve worked in a positive, collaborative way with the district to
achieve our mutual goals, and I think the agreement reflects just a lot
of creative, positive options,” Mook said.
Supt. Robert Barbot also praised the agreement as extremely fair.
The tentative agreement is unusual because it covers two years instead
of one. Next year, teachers will be able to focus on other pressing
issues, such as staff development, Mook said.
Newport-Mesa’s 6% raise compares favorably with some other unified
districts that have completed negotiations, with Garden Grove teachers
hammering out a tentative 4.4% raise and Laguna Beach teachers snagging a
5% increase.
One component of the agreement that Mook is especially happy with is a
provision for additional extra-duty pay for all teachers who participate
in after-school activities, such as coaching, augmenting an amount that
has been stagnant since 1992.
“We’ve been on the bottom on salary comparisons, so we had to put
every dollar onto the basic salary schedule, so we’ve never been able to
address things for all those dedicated teachers,” Mook said.
Another element that the teachers’ federation spent a great deal of
time negotiating was protection for catastrophic injury and illness. The
agreement calls for teachers to bank their sick days in a pool that other
employees can draw from.
“We think it’s a very humane process,” Mook said. “And we fully expect
teachers to donate to their colleagues. I don’t’ know that there’s very
many other districts that have something like this.”
The agreement also raises the amount the district will cover for
health benefits from $5,800 to $6,225 a year, Mook said.
-- Deirdre Newman covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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