Report: Disparity in teacher salaries
Marisa O’Neil
A statewide report released Tuesday found significant disparities
between teacher salaries at low-income and affluent schools, but
local officials say it isn’t an issue in Newport-Mesa.
The report, published by The Education Trust-West, compared
estimated average teacher salaries between schools with high numbers
and low numbers of poverty-level and minority students. In some
districts, it found, the pay disparity was more than $5,000.
In Newport-Mesa Unified School District, the gap in teacher pay
between high-poverty and low-poverty schools was $1,352, according to
the report. Teacher salaries at Newport-Mesa schools with a low
number of minority students averaged $801 higher than those with
large minority populations.
“That means Newport-Mesa is spending more on teachers in schools
serving the fewest numbers of low income, Latino and African-American
students,” said Russlynn Ali, executive director of The Education
Trust-West. “Relative to the rest of the state, Newport-Mesa stands
out a bit. Most of the districts statewide have larger poverty gaps
than minority gaps. Newport-Mesa doesn’t follow that trend.”
For example, Placentia-Yorba Linda Unified School District pays
teachers at schools in more affluent areas more than $5,000 more than
those in low-income areas, according to the report. West Contra Costa
Unified School District has a gap of more than $7,000 between schools
with high and low numbers of minority students, the report stated.
The Education Trust-West is an Oakland-based organization that
examines achievement gaps among students. The report is entitled
“California’s Hidden Teacher Spending Gap: How State and District
Budgeting Practices Shortchange Poor and Minority Students and Their
Schools.”
It does not identify specific teacher salaries for each district.
Newport-Mesa Unified School District Trustees last year approved
teacher raises, bringing the starting salary to about $38,000.
Teachers get pay increases for time on the job and advanced degrees
and top out at about $83,000.
The report shows that more experienced, better-paid teachers often
end up in more affluent schools, rather than the schools with more
needy students, Ali said.
“There’s no greater impact on student achievement than the power
of a teacher,” she said. “It’s more important than socio-economic
status, race or the educational level of their parents.”
Lorri McCune, assistant superintendent of human resources for
Newport-Mesa Unified School District, said that she hasn’t seen the
report but doesn’t think schools on the predominantly-Latino Westside
of Costa Mesa are getting the short shrift when it comes to teachers.
Costa Mesa’s Whittier Elementary School, she said, has some of the
most experienced teachers in the district.
“So many teachers come in with a passion to teach the
English-learner kids,” she said. “They don’t come in and say, ‘Oh, I
want to be on the Newport Beach side [of the district].”
Los Angeles Unified School District is implementing a plan to
place more experienced teachers at its lower-income schools to
improve performance there, Ali said. Newport-Mesa hasn’t seen a need
to do that, McCune said.
New and experienced teachers are spread throughout the district,
said Jim Rogers, president of the Newport-Mesa Federation of
Teachers. Many veteran teachers with masters degrees, and some with
doctorates, teach in Westside schools, he said.
“The staff at Estancia [High School] are highly professional,” he
said. “They work their tails off to do the best they can. The
teachers at Estancia wouldn’t want to teach anywhere else.”
The report is available online at https://www.hiddengap.org.
* MARISA O’NEIL covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (714) 966-4618 or by e-mail at marisa.oneil @latimes.com.
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