The Commercial Appeal

Shelby schools plan to up wages

Employees would get at least $15 an hour

- Jennifer Pignolet Memphis Commercial Appeal USA TODAY NETWORK - TENNESSEE

Shelby County Schools plans to raise its minimum wage for all its employees to $15 an hour, Superinten­dent Dorsey Hopson said.

That would mean increases for about 1,200 employees who currently make between $10.60 and $14.98. The majority of those currently make between $13 and $14.50 an hour.

The total cost will be $2.4 million, but only about $900,000 to the district’s general fund budget. Many of the low-wage employees are funded through federal grant programs like Title 1.

Many of the affected workers serve the district as teaching assistants, clerical assistants or secretarie­s or work in nutrition. Part-time employees are not included in the increase, a district spokeswoma­n said.

Hopson called the increase “the right thing to do,” especially as Memphis readies for the 50th anniversar­y of the death of Martin Luther King Jr. next month.

“We think it’s a huge opportunit­y to lead,” Hopson said. “It’s also a huge opportunit­y to honor Dr. King’s legacy.”

Hopson made the announceme­nt

during a work session Tuesday night. He said he will bring a formal proposal to the board in the next 30 days.

His announceme­nt comes in the wake of a report from the National Civil Rights Museum and the University of Memphis that showed racially-associated poverty and income inequality persist in Memphis 50 years after King’s death.

“What was so striking to me is that poverty levels since 1968 in Memphis have actually gone up,” Hopson said. “Income gaps have gone up.”

Activists in Memphis have also been part of a national fight to raise the minimum wage for fast food employees to $15 an hour. In February, more than 500 people organized by the group Fight for $15 marched from Clayborn Temple to City Hall waving “I Am A Man” and “I Am A Woman” signs.

Hopson said a teaching assistant told him she was considerin­g quitting her job to work at a mall because she could earn more there.

Now in the midst of planning for next year’s budget, Hopson and Chief Financial Officer Lin Johnson have been looking at how the district can make a difference.

“Lin and I have been thinking very deeply about how the Shelby County Schools can, in its own way and in a responsibl­e way, address some of the poverty concerns we have here,” he said.

It’s extra important, Hopson said, as so many of their employees send their children to SCS schools. District leaders constantly lament the challenges that come with educating children who live in poverty.

Board members endorsed the idea, congratula­ting Hopson for leading on the issue across Memphis.

“This is a bold step for us to move forward as a district,” board chairwoman Shante Avant said.

Reach Jennifer Pignolet at jennifer. pignolet@commercial­appeal.com or on Twitter @JenPignole­t.

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