Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

North Little Rock board to look at covid pay

Compensati­on per day proposed for on-site work in school district

- NEAL EARLEY ARKANSAS DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE

NORTH LITTLE ROCK — The North Little Rock School Board is considerin­g a proposal that would give school staffers a one- time compensati­on payment for in- school work during the 2021-22 year.

During a special School Board meeting Thursday, Finance Director Brian Brown called the proposal “additional pay for additional duties during the covid-19 pandemic.”

If the proposal is approved, then each employee will get an extra $15.27 for every day worked on-site. District employees would be eligible for the compensato­ry pay for up to 178 “student contact” days.

To be eligible for the pandemic pay, staffers would have to sign a statement saying they had to perform extra duties because of the pandemic.

Employees who would be eligible for the pandemic pay include teachers, aides and administra­tion, nutrition, technology, maintenanc­e, custodial, transporta­tion and other staffers.

“A custodian may be cleaning extra, or doing extra cleaning; a teacher may be monitoring social distancing. All of those activities qualify,” Brown said.

The school district would fund the proposal with federal money from the recent stimulus package passed by Congress. The money would come specifical­ly through the Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Fund program.

The pandemic pay can only go toward compensati­ng staffers for work related to distributi­on and caused by covid-19.

Only school district staffers still employed on May 22 will be eligible for the pandemic pay, as a way to incentiviz­e employees staying with the district.

The proposal mirrors a previous plan that paid staffers for pandemic work for the previous school year.

The School Board will vote on the proposal at its Nov. 18 meeting.

In addition, the North Little Rock School District is considerin­g a salary increase for staffers after similar proposals in the Little Rock and Pulaski County Special districts.

Representa­tives from the Licensed Personnel Policy Committee presented a plan to the School Board on Thursday about the raise in salary.

Carolyn Jackson, chair of the committee, said a teacher-salary increase of $4,000 would help the district recruit and retain more teachers.

“We currently have unstaffed positions even this far into the school year where we have classrooms with no permanent teacher,” Jackson said. “They’re led by subs, and that is something that happens every year.”

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