Dayton Daily News

Substitute­s sueDayton school board

Lawsuit: Dayton Public Schools, ex-contractor violated laws for long-termsubsti­tute teachers.

- ByJeremyP. Kelley Contact this reporter at jeremy.kelley@coxinc.com.

A group of 48 substitute teachersha­ssuedDayto­n’sschoolboa­rd and a former school district contractor, saying those agencies violated state law governing longterm substitute­s in 2015 and 2016.

Thesuit, filed lastweek inMontgome­ry County Common Pleas Court, names Parallel Employment Group, the company that managed substitute staffing for Dayton Public Schools from201519.

The teachers claim they were employed by Parallel as subs for DPS, and that each served in the same assignment for more than 60 days, but were not provided the benefits Ohio lawrequire­s in that situation.

State lawsays after 60 days subbing in one specific teaching position, a teacher shall “be granted sick leave, visiting days, and other local privileges granted to regular teachers including a salary not less than the minimum salary on the current adopted salary schedule.”

Substitute teachers are generally paid on a per-day basis, at lower wages than the salary schedules for full-time teachers.

Parallel, a Wisconsin-based company that operates in several states, began managing DPS’ substitute operation in January of 2015, the first time the district had outsourced that function.

In the lawsuit, the teachers say the violations occurred shortly after Parallel’s contract withDPS began — in the 2014-15 and 201516 school years. The suit says 19 subswho met the60-day threshold in 2014-15 failed to receive appropriat­e benefits, then 44 subs had the same thing happen in 2015-16.

Susan Jansen, attorney for the teachers, declined to comment on specifics of the case, including howmuch back pay and benefits could be at stake. The lawsuit seeks “appropriat­e compensati­on, including all benefits and backpay required to make them whole.”

DPS Superinten­dent Elizabeth Lolli, who didn’t join the district until late 2016, also declined comment on the lawsuit. Parallel Employment Group officials did not respond to requests for comment.

In summer of 2019, DPS terminated its contract with Parallel and hired ESS Northeast LLC as its new substitute staffing contractor.

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