The Signal

Newhall school district board approves raises

Superinten­dent Jeff Pelzel receives 4% salary increase; was given ‘exemplary rating’ for all of his work

- By Jose Herrera

The Newhall School District governing board unanimousl­y approved a 4% salary increase for Superinten­dent Jeff Pelzel after he obtained an “exemplary rating” while teachers begin negotiatio­ns with the district in hopes of a similar outcome.

“He was given an exceptiona­l rating for all of his work that he performed through a cyberattac­k, a ransomware attack that the district experience­d, and through the constant changes during the pandemic,” said Brain Walters, the president of the governing board.

The salary increase, which would raise his current salary from $200,000 to $208,000, was included in his contract, he added.

“He’s eligible for it when he meets the contract terms, and he did,” Walters said.

The governing board met on Tuesday as part of its bimonthly meeting, and more than 100 Newhall teachers were also in attendance, in person and virtually.

Hilary Hall, the copresiden­t of the Newhall Teachers Associatio­n and a teacher at Pico Canyon Elementary School, said teachers showed up to show unity.

“We wanted to let people in the district and the school board know that the NTA is unified and that we stand behind our negotiatio­ns team,” Hall said.

Teachers “sunshine” or highlight sections of the contract they are going to negotiate, and the board approved that, too, according to Hall.

“This opens up the negotiatio­n process,” Hall said. “We’re hoping to get a significan­t raise. We haven’t had a raise on the salary schedule in three years.”

Walters said he understand­s that teachers want raises, and he noted that last year the district approved a 1.5% off-schedule raise, which means it is not ongoing.

“It would be our desire to always be able to give our teachers raises, but unfortunat­ely we don’t control that,” he said. “We don’t control the money that comes into us. We only control what we can do with it once we have it, and we do our best to stick to our board protocols, as well as our establishe­d and legal limits about how much we can dip into our reserves.”

Hall recognized that the superinten­dent has the salary raise written in his contract, but she hopes the board will also recognize that their teachers are also exemplary.

“In the Newhall School District, there’s a lot of talk constantly about how we have the best test scores in the valley,” Hall said. “That’s touted to attract people to the district. We feel that our scores and our work are part of what makes this district exemplary.”

Walters noted that negotiatio­ns happen between bargaining teams behind closed-door sessions. He said the district has always taken a collaborat­ive approach to negotiatin­g.

“We believe in interest-based bargaining, where we talk about finding mutual interests and try to address those interests rather than negotiatin­g the other side to the ground. We feel very strongly that we will be able to represent all stakeholde­rs which includes teachers, classified staff, our parents and our students.”

Pelzel was unavailabl­e for comment at the time of publicatio­n of this article.

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