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TexasTowelie

(112,200 posts)
Thu Nov 23, 2017, 11:25 PM Nov 2017

A minimum salary for Colorado teachers? State officials may ask lawmakers to consider it.

As part of a broad plan to increase the volume of high-quality teachers in Colorado, state officials are considering asking lawmakers to take the bold step of establishing a minimum teacher salary requirement tied to the cost of living.

Officials from the state departments of education and higher education are finalizing a list of recommendations to address challenges to Colorado’s teacher workforce. Pressing for the legislation on teacher salaries is one of dozens of recommendations included in a draft report.

The report, assembled at the request of the legislature, also proposes a marketing campaign and scholarships to attract new teachers to rural areas.

Representatives from the Colorado Department of Education said they would not discuss the recommendations until they’re final. However, the department earlier this month briefed the State Board of Education on their proposed recommendations in advance of the Dec. 1 deadline for it to be finalized.

Read more: http://www.coloradoindependent.com/167651/colorado-minimum-teacher-salary

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A minimum salary for Colorado teachers? State officials may ask lawmakers to consider it. (Original Post) TexasTowelie Nov 2017 OP
All states should do this. BigmanPigman Nov 2017 #1
Wow! blaze Nov 2017 #2
We also had to pay for over own disability with each paycheck. BigmanPigman Nov 2017 #3

BigmanPigman

(51,593 posts)
1. All states should do this.
Fri Nov 24, 2017, 02:52 AM
Nov 2017

As a teacher in CA I didn't receive a raise (even cost of living) for over 5 years in the 2000s. And this was WITH a union. The choice was either get a pink slip or work for no increase. If you figure in the COLA we were working for a pay cut and our health insure co pays doubled as well as 75% of total support staff cuts, class size increases, 55+ hour weeks and we paid for supplies out of pocket. It has remained the same ever since.

One reason for this was Charter Schools. The public schools lost students so we received less from the state. CA ranks 46th in how much each school receives per student per year.

blaze

(6,361 posts)
2. Wow!
Fri Nov 24, 2017, 01:51 PM
Nov 2017

I just retired from a CO school district after 20 yrs. as an HVAC Tech. There wasn't a single year I didn't receive a raise. A few years, the raise was short of the COA but I don't think we ever got less than 1.5%. AND we received at $250 allowance for uniforms. AND, of course, we were never expected to pay out of pocket for any parts that we might need for repairs (aka supplies needed for the job).

I'm surprised to read that CA ranks so low on $ per student.

BigmanPigman

(51,593 posts)
3. We also had to pay for over own disability with each paycheck.
Fri Nov 24, 2017, 04:17 PM
Nov 2017

CA is on of 13 states with Social Security Offset. This means that if you ever worked at a job besides teaching and you paid into SS you lose it when you become a teacher (most of it anyway, you do get about 10% of it when you retire). I learned this when I began teaching and experienced 20 year teachers never believed me. I had to show them the forms/paperwork to prove it. We pay into a pension and not into SS. I worked for years before I changed careers and have enough credits, etc.

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