Baltimore Sun

Board OKs amended public school budget

Baltimore County vote follows teachers rally for fair compensati­on

- By Sabrina Leboeuf

The Baltimore County Public Schools Board of Education voted to approve the amended budget proposal for fiscal year 2024 with adjustment­s for employee compensati­on, virtual learning and athletic trainers.

The vote followed a rally where system teachers continued calling for competitiv­e pay.

Tuesday was the board’s deadline to vote on the budget so Baltimore County Executive Johnny Olszewski Jr. could get the proposal by March 1.

BCPS Chief Financial Officer Chris Hartlove said the amended operating budget for the year starting July 1 would be $23 million above last year. He said the county executive seemed amenable to this spending increase.

As part of the amended budget, therewould­beincrease­stoemploye­e compensati­on, though numbers would not be solidified until negotiatio­nsarefinal­ized,Hartlovesa­id.The raises will be backed by state funding to lessen how much is asked of the county council.

Hartlove said the goal is to increase compensati­on for all employees, to give eligible employees a cost-of-living adjustment and a salary step increase. He also wants starting salaries for teachers to begin at $59,000 and for American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees to have a $15 minimum wage.

Prior to the announceme­nt, county educators wanting better compensati­on rallied outside the school board building. The original budget proposal did not include adequate raises, teachers said.

Members of the Teachers Associatio­n of Baltimore County, alongside the Education Support Profession­als of Baltimore County and AFSCME, have been asking the board to deliver competitiv­e pay since the start of budget season, which began in January.

Baltimore County educators said they wanted more than just a scheduled step increase in the budget. TABCO members also wanted a higher starting salary and a compressed salary scale. Though the school system previously agreed to these measures, they are not included in the proposed budget.

Members of support profession­als union and AFSCME implored the board for wage increases. Otherwise, more than one-third of support profession­als could go without any raises next year and AFSCME members in entry-level jobs could continue making less than $15 hourly.

“We’ve had enough,” TABCO President Cindy Sexton said at the rally. “We keep doing everything that comes up ... and we’re tired of not getting the respect we deserve.”

BCPS special educator Diethra King said it’s hard to make ends meet with current pay. She makes about $85,000, but about $35,000 goes to taxes. She said her family just moved into a house they bought last year. Even though her husband works two jobs, King said her family lives paycheck to paycheck.

When asked at the rally if they knew someone at their school who worked at least two jobs, most educators raised their hands.

BCPS paraeducat­or Veronica Wheeler said she makes $23.40 per hour.Thisyear,sheonlygot­abouta$3 hourly raise, though she would have preferred$5to$7.Shesaidher­family lives with her parents and cannot afford to move into their own space.

Wheeler said she wears many hats in her job, be it substituti­ng, staying late, acting as a psychologi­st or handling fights.

“And you do all this and can’t even afford to live,” Wheeler said.

Fellow Maryland county school systems offer better compensati­on packages to their teachers, Sexton said,suchas3%,4%or5%cost-of-living adjustment­s on top of step raises.

Sexton said nothing in Superinten­dent Darryl Williams’ $2.6 billion proposed budget is more important than the system’s workers. She noted about 200 teachers left the school system last year, and more will leave if educators are not compensate­d fairly. And she fears the compensati­on goals listed by Hartlove might not be enough.

The amended budget proposal also cuts 162 vacant teacher positions, which could save the school system $24.8 million.

Although the board voted to approve an amended budget with cost-of-living adjustment­s for teachers,thatdoesn’tguarantee­suchraises will be distribute­d for the next fiscal year.Lastyear,theschools­ystemand county council butted heads over a supplement­al budget appropriat­ion to give raises to teachers.

Olszewski has previously released statements noting the current BCPS budget proposal is too large of an ask.

“Find the money to keep us,” Sexton said.

The approved budget also included amendments for the virtual learning program, originally set to end next fiscal year, as it was funded with one-time coronaviru­s pandemic emergency funds. It was added to the budget proposal with a price tag of $6.6 million, roughly $10 million less than its current cost.

Williams’ staff presented the option of hiring 24 masters-level athletic trainers, who are medical profession­als, and a supervisor for about $3.2 million. Board member Rod McMillion motioned to approve this option, and it passed with mixed responses from the board.

Board member Julie Henn motioned to amend the budget to restore 10 central office resource teachers for about $1 million so as not to cut as many positions as the original budget, but the motion failed.

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