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Decades-old system structures teacher salaries; D-304 may deviate from it

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Tony Malay, president of the Batavia Education Association, teaches a shop class to seventh-graders Wednesday at Rotolo Middle School in Batavia. (Sandy Bressner – sbressner@shawmedia.com)

Assertions that teachers are overpaid and under-worked may make educators sensitive when focus turns to their salaries, Batavia Education Association President Tony Malay said.

But discussions about public teacher salaries are unavoidable, particularly when school districts are negotiating new contracts.

In this area, St. Charles School District 303 is next on the bargaining docket because its two-year agreement expires this academic year. Talks should begin soon, district officials said.

It comes on the heels of contract talks in Geneva School District 304, where emotions ran high and teachers threatened to strike. At issue was the school board’s offer of a hard salary freeze the first year. While the teachers had support, many taxpayers urged the school board to hold firm, citing declining home values and increasing taxes.

The ratified contract included pay freezes with exceptions and the prospect that the traditional way of determining teacher salaries may change.

Whether Geneva is on the brink of a widespread trend regarding teacher compensation is unknown.

“We wouldn’t want to change something that’s not broken,” Malay said.

A traditional system

Public school districts here use a salary schedule – a matrix that rewards educators for teaching experience and additional education – to determine what teachers will make.

The theory is that more experience and education make teachers better, District 303 Superintendent Don Schlomann said.

“In some respects, it’s designed for pay for performance,” he said.

Salary schedules date to the mid-1900s, Schlomann said, and they are universal throughout the country.

District 304, however, is expected to give its salary schedule a second look.

The contract ratified in November included a letter of understanding that establishes a joint salary schedule study group. This group of teachers and administrators will address future teacher compensation. Geneva school board President Mark Grosso said the group has yet to meet.

Greg Romaneck, the chief of staff for Batavia School District 101, said a minority of school districts have begun talking about moving away from the salary schedule. As education undergoes reforms in areas such as tenure and compensation, he said he believes in the next three to five years, more contracts could include nontraditional salary schedules. But he doesn’t think there would be a groundswell of change.

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