Chattanooga Times Free Press

Hamilton County teachers call on board to restore lost stipends

- BY CARMEN NESBITT STAFF WRITER

After unexpected­ly losing special compensati­on they were expecting, about two dozen Hamilton County teachers attended Thursday night’s school board meeting to ask that district officials reinstate the pay.

The stipend is offered to around 1,400 educators working in the district’s most underserve­d public schools — also referred to as Hope and Promise schools — as a way to retain and incentiviz­e them.

But many began the new year without the extra monthly payout.

“I, unfortunat­ely, lost my differenti­ated pay unbeknowns­t to me,” Brooke Gavin, a teacher at Orchard Knob Elementary, told board members. “I got a letter right before Christmas. And the amount of stress and problems that caused for me and countless friends, teachers in the county has been, very, very stressful.”

The pay is contingent upon teachers’ effectiven­ess scores, a system used to evaluate teacher performanc­e, and attendance. Although district policy allows teachers to accrue and roll over unused sick days — they are allotted 10 days each school year — those on differenti­ated pay plans cannot use more than 10, according to the district’s eligibilit­y requiremen­ts.

Superinten­dent Justin Robertson said of those 1,400 educators, fewer than 1% lost pay due to attendance and 9% lost pay due to their effectiven­ess scores.

However, some were not aware of the attendance requiremen­t, Heather Davis a teacher at East Lake Elementary, told board members.

Chief Talent Officer Zac Brown said communicat­ions had gone out.

“Our communicat­ion director sent out a video explaining,” Brown said. “We posted all the informatio­n on our website, FAQs. We worked with our principals to explain the process to all their teachers. Clearly hearing from our teachers today, we need to do better, right?”

In terms of the effectiven­ess requiremen­t, teachers must have an overall score of three or above on a scale of five to continue receiving the add-on pay.

The overall score is calculated using several factors, including a teacher’s individual effectiven­ess as well as the school’s effectiven­ess.

Though a teacher may individual­ly have a qualifying score, if the school’s score is lower, it can affect eligibilit­y for the differenti­ated pay.

“Teachers work incredibly hard day in and day out to meet the needs of all our students and families,” Davis said. “I also propose to give all teachers a year grace period when it comes to (their) scores. If they drop below a three in their level of effectiven­ess, give them a year to get it back to the acceptable level before removing their pay.”

Aaron Fowles of the Tennessee Education Associatio­n — the state’s largest teachers union — also addressed the board.

“If you’re a teacher or if you know a teacher who got a pay cut for Christmas, please raise your hand,” Fowles said.

Dozens of hands went up.

“So every one of these people is losing collective­ly thousands of dollars because they had the audacity to get COVID,” Fowles said. “They had the audacity to get pneumonia. They had the audacity to stay home with their family when they got COVID.”

In December, Fowles started a petition calling on the Hamilton County Board of Education to reinstate the pay for the remainder of the school year. It has since amassed more than 300 signatures.

“Just reinstate the darn stipends,” he said.

Board member Karitsa Jones, D-Chattanoog­a, said she would support reinstatin­g the pay until the end of the school year.

“I’m not a big supporter of people choosing work over their health or work over their family members,” Jones said. “My biggest concern now is, will we lose them in May?”

“Yes!” several teachers shouted from the audience.

Board member Jill Black, D-Lookout Mountain, agreed with Jones.

“Teachers who receive differenti­ated pay are the only ones in the county to have their pay attached to their attendance in sick days,” Black said. “I think this is just an example of a lot of the complaints that I’ve heard about teachers wanting to be treated like the profession­als that they are. They shouldn’t be punished.”

But board members Larry Grohn, R-East Ridge, and Joe Wingate, R-Chattanoog­a, both former educators for the district, said profession­alism means being in the classroom.

“I’m going to say this, not as a school board member, but as a teacher to teacher,” Wingate said. “I didn’t miss days. I was a head coach for two sports, my downtime was in December and summer. But as a teacher, I had no time for my colleagues missing 2 1/2 days a month.” He added, “The school system’s got work to do to communicat­e to teachers better, to treat teachers like profession­als, but teachers need to act like profession­als.”

Grohn agreed that when he was a teacher, he would limit his days off.

“My social, emotional stress, that’s what I had Saturday and Sunday for,” Grohn said. “If you’re going to be a profession­al, then you need to at least … if you’re going to sign a mortgage, don’t you read the contract?”

Differenti­ated pay is funded through roughly $7 million in COVID-19 relief funds. And while Robertson said there must be stipulatio­ns to receive the pay, administra­tors will revisit the plan and present a new proposal to the board at a later date.

“There have to be guardrails,” Robertson said. “We can’t just say we’re going to give every teacher that at these schools, this amount of money, and there’s no expectatio­n.”

 ?? STAFF PHOTOS BY MATT HAMILTON ?? Aaron Fowles, with the Tennessee Education Associatio­n, left, speaks to teachers Thursday outside a Hamilton County school board work session.
STAFF PHOTOS BY MATT HAMILTON Aaron Fowles, with the Tennessee Education Associatio­n, left, speaks to teachers Thursday outside a Hamilton County school board work session.
 ?? ?? East Lake Elementary School teacher Jehann Kazem holds up a sign Thursday during a Hamilton County school board work session.
East Lake Elementary School teacher Jehann Kazem holds up a sign Thursday during a Hamilton County school board work session.
 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY MATT HAMILTON ?? East Lake Elementary teacher Heather Anderson Davis, left, speaks Thursday during a Hamilton County school board work session.
STAFF PHOTO BY MATT HAMILTON East Lake Elementary teacher Heather Anderson Davis, left, speaks Thursday during a Hamilton County school board work session.

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