bballmom56
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Feb 23, 2004
- Messages
- 3,037
You do understand that when they say 4% raises were given that it does not mean that TEACHERS get a 4% raise across the board, right? 4% is spread across the entire pay guide and includes secretaries, nurses, custodial staff, etc. People see 4% and they assume that every employee got a huge raise when in fact, most never see anywhere near 4%. My last raise worked out to 1.035% although the newspaper claims I got 4%.
Well it's still more than my DH got - a college professor with a PhD at a private college for 20 years. He makes far less than some of the faculty with the same longevity and less credentials at our public HS. All employees at the college got 0, and now all state funding has been cut. He pays $700/month for our health insurance (which the public school teachers do not) and over $600/month for his retirement (which the public school teachers do not).
I just did a quick check of the public payroll and about 40 out of 140 of our HS teachers make over $80,000 with a master's degree and less than 20 years experience. I'm not feeling too much sympathy for them.