China Daily

Higher salaries for teachers better than bonuses

-

THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT IN LU’AN, East China’s Anhui province, has issued an apology for the crude law enforcemen­t methods used to break up a teachers’ protest. Qianjiang Daily comments:

The apology came after photos were posted online showing police officers taking away the teachers by force.

The teachers at public schools in the Jin’an and Yu’an districts of Lu’an in East China’s Anhui province were protesting because they did not receive a bonus that teachers from the other districts in the city had received.

The bonus stems from a clause of the Teacher’s Law, which stipulates the average income of teachers of public schools should not be lower than that of local civil servants, so the city government provides the teachers with a bonus each year to fill in their income gap with local officials so as not to violate the law.

Although it is right for the Lu’an government to apologize for the policemen acting improperly, and it has refuted suggestion­s that the money has been misappropr­iated, it is a pity that it has not yet explained why when other teachers in their jurisdicti­on have received the bonus, the teachers in the two districts have not yet got theirs, or even when they will receive it.

The response of Lu’an has deliberate­ly avoided these issues.

The bonuses depend on the financial situation of local government­s, and some places cannot afford to pay them. It is understand­able that there is a gap between different places, which depends entirely on how deep their pockets are. But within the same administra­tive area, if the bonuses are paid to some, they should be paid to all.

Teachers, especially teachers in less-developed areas, shoulder the responsibi­lity of passing on their knowledge so that young people have an opportunit­y to change their fate through their own efforts. If teachers are not treated fairly, it will be impossible to retain good teachers. This is a problem that cannot be evaded.

Local government­s need to enhance the transparen­cy of their finances, and increase teachers’ salaries to replace the current bonus system.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong