Help me out here,...the teachers are saying that since their salary didn't go up,...that means it went down ???
In the private sector, the majority, if you are told your wage is going to be frozen, happens a lot when a company/economy is in the shits, the persons wage stays exactly the same, it doesn't go up, it doesn't go down.
AND that person would NEVER say my wage when DOWN, because they felt they were "entitled" to an increase.
FAST
He just loves hyperbole and gets a boner every time teacher talk comes up.JohnLarue obviously has a stick up his ass. Maybe someone put it there.
make the banked sick days payout at end of yearIf they don't use them then they lose them. Many jobs have this type of situation in place. When it is coming to the end of the period in which 'paid days' can be used, employees use them.
A good comment. Sometimes I think that the difference between right and left, as portrayed by this board, is that the right folk are mad they aren't rich and blame government and poor people for their problems. The left seems to be more focused on community. So you get endless debates about how 'cushy' government funded jobs are which are really veiled attacks at those they perceive are doing better then themselves while they ignore the inherent problems in the system.There really needs to be full disclosure of the relationship with teachers or lack thereof in these comments.
Discussions like this boil down to "they're greedy" versus "it's their rights of collective bargaining and imposed contracts" arguments. I'd love to know how many people would take all the "sick days" if they were lawyers/doctors/business people and protected by a contract. You're a liar to say you'd do any different given the same situation as what teachers are in. People are people. Put 30,000 of them together and you get a pretty good spread of general populace behaviour.
LOL...that's all you got?ah yes folks the discussion keeps getting more intelligent, let me guess a teacher threw you out of class once for acting like a jackass so on that day you swore hatred for all those in the education system to this day. Good to see you also did quite well on your writing skills.
Although the social issue of dishonesty and selfishness that underlies the use'em or lose'em response to paid sick-days is well worth talking about.…edit…
That's what we should be talking about, not petty gripes about the number of sick days teachers are taking.
If it is low in comparison, I wouldnt be surprised....Yes all teachers will lose 1.5% of salary in the 2nd year of the contract, they will have to take 3 days. If we were to look at where our country stands in education in the world most here would be surprised.
I still don't think we are on the same wave length here.Fast, many teachers salaries ARE going DOWN next year by 1.5%. Not just frozen, down. If you've taught for 10 yrs. plus your salary will be 1.5% less. An actual pay decrease.
it's called rising about the gutter level that you brought things down to.LOL...that's all you got?
I still don't think we are on the same wave length here.
If teacher "X" for example, was making $80,000 salary in the last year of the old contract, that SAME teacher's salary would now be $78,800 in the 2nd year of the new contract ??
FAST
Go throw some tea in the lake.Private sector people are not paid by, or reliant on, the taxpayer. I resent my earnings, which are legally stolen from me by all levels of government...
Are the comments not worthy for their content so you have to judge them on bias.There really needs to be full disclosure of the relationship with teachers or lack thereof in these comments....
Sounds like a good idea.make the banked sick days payout at end of year
instead of raise
coming to work everyday will get you your raise at end of year
if you are genuinely sick all the time then change your habits
A couple years ago but top of the google search.If it is low in comparison, I wouldnt be surprised....
Yes. If teacher X has reached the top of the pay grid, that's correct. I don't have a calculator handy but If a teacher x has reached the top of the grid, their salary will be 1.5% less in the 2nd year of the contract. So your numbers sound about right.
If a teacher is moving up the grid, they will still move up but not til the second half of the year. Those teachers also get paid 3 less days than normal so their move up the grid (increase in salary) will be lessened by the 1.5 % less pay.
In the end, some teacher's get slight increases, some are losing salary, all balancing out to a pay freeze.