Newport-Mesa teachers get raise
Marisa O’Neil
Newport-Mesa Unified School District trustees voted Tuesday night to
approve a labor agreement that will give teachers a pay raise of more
than 5% over two years and increase instructional time for students.
The three-year contract is effective from the beginning of this
school year, but raises won’t take effect until the 2004-05 school
calendar. Salaries were determined after a survey of other area
districts.
“It’s our intent to get our salaries up to the average of Orange
County unified school districts,” said Lorri McCune, assistant
superintendent of human resources.
The district has promised that teachers’ salaries will be in the
top quarter of schools in the county, said Jim Rogers, president of
the Newport-Mesa Federation of Teachers.
In the fall, starting salaries 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 previously topped-out
salary was at $81,173. For the 2005-06 school year, salaries will
start at $40,104 and go up to $83,978.
Starting salaries for teachers with equivalent qualifications
start at $39,588 in the Tustin Unified School District, $35,020 in
Orange Unified and $41,378 in Irvine. Los Alamitos, with racetrack
revenue to help boost school budgets, consistently has some of the
highest teacher salaries, Rogers said.
“We’ll never be at the point of Los Alamitos,” Rogers said.
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.
Other certificated employees, including school nurses, school
counselors and some special education teachers will also get raises.
Negotiations between the district and Newport-Mesa Federation of
Teachers also increased the number of instructional minutes for
grades one through three, and will give individual schools the option
of full-day kindergarten.
Now, only Whittier, Newport Coast and Newport Heights elementary
schools have full-day kindergarten. Because lack of space prevents
some schools from having kindergartners there all day, the district
will provide movable classrooms to schools that choose the option,
McCune said.
First-, second- and third-graders will be at school the same hours
as fourth-, fifth- and sixth-graders starting next year. Before,
McCune said, there was as much as a 45-minute difference between the
grades, depending on the school.
By aligning start and end times at elementary schools for all
grades, the district stands to save in transportation costs, Rogers
said.
Standardized test scores, he said, should also benefit from a
longer day.
“I have every confidence our teachers are fully capable of coming
together and coming up with a plan [for the longer day],” Rogers
said.
Other items negotiated included union rights, peer assistance and
review, transfers, leaves, benefits and the grievance procedure. Both
sides agreed in January to open those items for discussion.
The previous contract had expired at the end of the 2002-03 school
year.
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