The Day

Some school districts still have open positions

As the academic year rolls back around, vacancies remain due to pandemic

- By KIMBERLY DRELICH Day Staff Writer

With schools reopening during the COVID-19 pandemic, districts have posted a host of job openings — from custodians to step up cleaning of buildings and aides to monitor lunch and recess, to substitute teachers and paraprofes­sionals.

As the school year starts, some districts still have vacancies, with late-in-the-season hiring and competitio­n from other districts among the challenges cited.

Waterford Superinten­dent Thomas Giard III said that, as of early September,

the school district still needs to hire a couple of substitute custodians and three to four recess/ lunchroom aides. The district also is hiring to fill three long-term teacher and about 10 paraprofes­sional vacancies, mostly existing positions left by staff members who have indicated they are not returning due to the pandemic.

Overall, the number of jobs for which the district is hiring is slightly higher than in previous years, though not drasticall­y. The main difference, Giard said, is that the positions are still open late in the summer.

“Filling these positions has been a challenge,” he said. “All districts are chasing seemingly the same finite pool of potential employees.”

Most school districts in the area are reopening in a “hybrid” format, with cohorts of students attending school in person two days a week and learning remotely the other three days.

East Lyme Superinten­dent Jeff Newton said his district also has “found the need to hire a few additional staff to support our students working remotely.” It’s still looking for paraprofes­sionals.

Compared to previous years, he said, filling open positions this year is “a bit more challengin­g,” as many districts are looking for extra staffing support.

Ledyard Public Schools lists 21 job openings, 19 of which have been posted since June. That’s slightly more openings than usual, Superinten­dent Jay Hartling said, including six more paraprofes­sional jobs.

He said the rate of incoming applicatio­ns has been flat, as it usually is this time of year. Normally, the school district tries to hire in the spring for the following fall, and it’s difficult to fill positions that open over the summer.

Hartling said having the number of open positions is stressful but current staff are able to make it work for now, given the reduction in class sizes due to the hybrid model. Due to the pandemic, the district shifted its substitute staffing structure to be building-specific, so the same people work in the same schools to reduce cross-contaminat­ion.

After hiring 55 new people last year, LEARN — an educationa­l service center that operates schools across the region — hired 41 new staff members this summer, including certified personnel, instructio­nal assistants, van drivers and playground monitors, Executive Director Kate Ericson said. The hiring was mainly due to resignatio­ns, as staff found new jobs in different districts or relocated, and a few were changing careers, she said. Some noncertifi­ed staff were not able to work in the hybrid model due to child care restraints.

Ericson said that LEARN was able to fill positions throughout the summer, with the exception of struggling to find certified candidates for a math opening. But as recently as the past two weeks, LEARN has had a number of resignatio­ns, and these positions are hard to fill.

“It is a challenge to fill the noncertifi­ed positions as well as find substitute­s,” she said. “These are not high-paying jobs, and there is not a large pool of candidates available right now.”

The New London school district has fewer teaching positions to fill than last year but is hiring in a variety of areas where there are traditiona­lly shortages.

“We have seen several late/ unexpected resignatio­ns and/ or retirement­s and the district continues to work with leadership to fill them and in most cases, has been successful,” said Kate McCoy, the district’s executive director of strategic planning.

The district is seeking paraprofes­sionals, 10 part-time custodial positions to deep clean the building, and hybrid substitute teachers, McCoy said. She said the district’s partners, Kelly Services, are experienci­ng high demand for substitute coverage throughout the region and the pool of available candidates is limited.

The district is hiring to ensure students are safe and “have a rich and engaging academic experience,” and the district has been “mindful of keeping class sizes small, assigning teachers based on student needs, and limiting the number of interactio­ns between students,” McCoy said.

It is not unusual at this juncture of any school year for it to be more challengin­g to find candidates to fill teaching positions, she said, as “Many job seekers have applied for and made decisions by this time.” She noted that the hiring challenges are not insurmount­able, though “there are still opportunit­ies for employment.”

Districts implementi­ng strategies

Patrice McCarthy, deputy director and general counsel for the Connecticu­t Associatio­n of Boards of Education, said districts are implementi­ng a number of strategies to address staffing needs during the pandemic, including overtime for custodians and paraprofes­sionals and hiring additional special education teachers and permanent substitute­s assigned to individual buildings.

The state Department of Education “has issued guidance on emergency certificat­ion and flexible staffing strategies to help districts meet their staffing level needs for the fall,” department spokesman Peter Yazbak said.

Some school districts are adding substitute­s and extra support staff for this year but have not had an issue filling the positions.

Groton Superinten­dent Michael Graner said his district had a typical season of about 20 teacher retirement­s in June. In addition to filling those positions, the district also sought about 20 substitute­s to cover for teachers who are taking a leave of absence for the first three months. A few teachers also are providing remote lessons full time because they are unable to enter the building due to a medical condition. He said the hiring process went well and the district is at full capacity for those positions.

The district also added two new social worker positions to address students’ emotional needs during the pandemic. And it is hiring about 10 parttime custodians to continuous­ly clean the buildings, with most of those positions filled, he said.

Montville Superinten­dent Laurie Pallin said her district typically sees some turnover in staff, especially part-time and hourly workers, over the summer but the transition this summer has been greater than normal.

Due to the pandemic, the district had to hire more permanent substitute­s, additional custodial staff for more frequent cleaning and sanitizing of school buildings during the day, certified nursing assistants and health aides to monitor medical care rooms, a safety officer at the middle school, and more monitors for bathrooms and meals, she explained.

“We have had several retirement­s, resignatio­ns and leave requests, and we have worked to fill those positions over the summer,” she added.

Pallin said the district has been “very pleased with the pool of applicants and (feels) that we have staffed the buildings with qualified personnel.”

The district will continue to advertise for one vacant school psychologi­st position, but has a plan in place to use other teachers in the short term to meet students’ needs.

North Stonington Superinten­dent Peter Nero said hiring was normal this year, with most of it related to teacher retirement­s.

As far as the impact of COVID-19, the small district has a few teachers that cannot come in due to health reasons. He said the district is focusing on hiring some per-diem substitute­s and one certified elementary school teacher.

Early on this summer, the district also had two teachers with young children and found it difficult to teach from home, who requested a leave of absence, and the district hired two new teachers to cover, he said.

This July and August, Norwich Public Schools had seven retirement­s and 10 resignatio­ns, compared to eight retirement­s, including former Superinten­dent Abby Dolliver, and 12 resignatio­ns over the summer of 2019.

But Superinten­dent Kristen Stringfell­ow said the district is hiring additional staff this year due to COVID-19 precaution­s, including certified nursing assistants, paraeducat­or substitute­s and teacher substitute­s.

“We are having some success filling positions. The hard-to-fill positions from last year remain hard to fill,” Stringfell­ow said, noting those included English as a second language, bilingual, world language, math, science, social studies, social worker, psychologi­st and preschool special education positions.

Lyme-Old Lyme schools are doing full in-person learning this year, Superinten­dent Ian Neviaser said, and received the same number of applicatio­ns this year as they always do, and all positions are filled. Other than hiring five additional permanent substitute­s, he said, “our hiring has not been outside the norm.”

Norwich Free Academy does not have a shortage of teachers, Head of School Brian M. Kelly said, and saw the normal number of vacancies over the summer with teacher departures. NFA still is advertisin­g for substitute teachers for normal needs throughout the year. Kelly said four NFA staff members are on family leave due to coronaviru­s concerns, and there are four long-term subs on campus now through Oct. 16.

Preston Public Schools, which runs its own school buses, started the year fully staffed with 15 drivers, “but we’re always looking to make sure we can meet all our obligation­s,” Superinten­dent Roy Seitsinger said.

The district is advertisin­g for bus drivers, as well as for full-time substitute teachers, one for each building, to have individual­s go through all the required training and report to the schools each day. Preston uses Kelly Services for substitute teachers and will continue to do that.

Preston also is looking for a replacemen­t part-time school social worker after the previous social worker found a full-time position elsewhere. No district staff sought leave based on COVID-19 concerns, Seitsinger said.

“We have seen several late/unexpected resignatio­ns and/or retirement­s and the district continues to work with leadership to fill them and in most cases, has been successful.” KATE MCCOY, NEW LONDON SCHOOL DISTRICT’S EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF STRATEGIC PLANNING

“We are having some success filling positions. The hard-to-fill positions from last year remain hard to fill.” KRISTEN STRINGFELL­OW, NORWICH PUBLIC SCHOOLS SUPERINTEN­DENT

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