Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Teachers seek higher reward for board certificat­ion

- DAVE PEROZEK

FAYETTEVIL­LE — Some teachers asked the School Board to increase pay for those who have achieved National Board certificat­ion.

The School District gives National Board certified teachers a $2,500 bonus. Certificat­ion is good for five years; teachers may receive another $2,500 each time they renew their certificat­ion.

The state also provides an annual stipend, though a recent change to the distributi­on formula — intended to attract more highly trained teachers to high-poverty schools — meant reduced stipends to most board-certified teachers in Fayettevil­le and similar districts.

The teachers once received $5,000, the new state formula cut it to $2,500 for anyone who started the certificat­ion process after 2017. The stipend is higher for teachers in high-poverty schools, but Fayettevil­le has only one such school.

The result is fewer Fayettevil­le teachers are pursuing board certificat­ion because of the decline in compensati­on, said Meme Hagers, a music teacher at Vandergrif­f Elementary School who earned certificat­ion in 2007.

The National Board for Profession­al Teaching Standards was establishe­d in 1987 to define and recognize accomplish­ed teaching. The standards are created by teachers, for teachers. National Board certificat­ion is a voluntary process to certify teachers against those standards, according to the nonprofit organizati­on’s website.

The process consists of four components. Candidates must submit all four components within the first three years of their candidacy. The cost is $475 per component. The state will reimburse candidates for those costs.

Hagers said the board certificat­ion process completely changed her as a teacher.

and operated by Entergy Arkansas. The utility has opened solar arrays and announced plans for more in recent years, and would be required under the proposed settlement to invest in hundreds more megawatts of renewable energy in coming years.

That settlement is being challenged before the Arkansas Public Service Commission.

Carbon dioxide, which is emitted from vehicles and other sources, is among the contributo­rs to climate change, scientists have found.

The federal report analyzes state-by-state emissions data through 2016, the latest full year for which data are available. Emissions calculated are from the electricit­y-generating sector, buildings and transporta­tion.

Arkansas was ranked 17th in the country in the production per capita of carbon dioxide. That’s about 20 metric tons per person.

Since 2015, coal usage for power production has declined in Arkansas as utilities and regional transmissi­on organizati­ons rely increasing­ly on renewable energy.

Nuclear power still provides the bulk of electricit­y.

Energy-related carbon emissions dropped 13.4 percent from 2005 to 2016 nationally. That decrease was from 6 billion metric tons to 5.2 billion metric tons. In Arkansas in that period, emissions increased 3.9 percent, from 60.1 million metric tons to 62.4 million metric tons.

At its highest point, Arkansas’ carbon emissions from energy sources was at 69 million metric tons. That was 2014, a year before the state’s use of coal-fired plants declined sharply.

Only nine states had carbon-emission increases from 2005 to 2016: Arkansas, Louisiana, North Dakota, Washington, Mississipp­i, Texas, Nebraska, South Dakota and Idaho. Louisiana’s emissions increased 1.8 percent, and Idaho’s emissions increased 16.3 percent. The biggest drop was in New Hampshire at 35.3 percent.

Many of the states with decreases have renewable energy generation portfolio standards, essentiall­y requiremen­ts for a certain amount of energy provided by renewable sources. Arkansas does not.

But utilities have largely planned to increase their renewable-energy output.

Entergy Arkansas, one of the largest electricit­y providers in the state, has opened and planned solar arrays and invested in natural gas plants, which emit less carbon dioxide than coal-fired plants.

Prices have dropped dramatical­ly for both solar and natural gas, including wind power, which has been proposed to go through Arkansas.

Late last year, Entergy agreed to stop burning coal at the state’s two largest coalfired plants and close one fueled by natural gas by 2030, in accordance with a settlement with the Sierra Club and the National Parks Conservati­on Associatio­n.

Moments before filing the proposed settlement, the environmen­tal groups sued Entergy Arkansas in federal court, accusing the utility of violating the Clean Air Act when it undertook projects in 2009 at the coal-fired plants without obtaining proper permits. The work resulted in an emissions increase, the complaint says.

Entergy maintains it had all of the required permits.

That settlement remains open in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas.

Sierra Club Arkansas Director Glen Hooks said many motions have been filed by numerous parties in the case, including those trying to intervene, but no major decisions have been made.

“We fully expect the settlement to be approved once these interventi­ons matters have been resolved,” Hooks said, given the number of groups, and Entergy, favoring it. A separate petition filed with the Arkansas Public Service Commission by Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge that requests an investigat­ion into the settlement also remains open. In a statement issued in December, Rutledge said the settlement had “not been properly vetted” and expressed concerns for the possible impact to electricit­y ratepayers who may have to fund future renewable-energy projects required by the settlement.

Rutledge also filed a motion to intervene in the settlement case as the Consumer Utilities Rate Advocacy Division, but Judge Kristine Baker has not ruled on that motion.

Communitie­s near the power plants in Independen­ce and Jefferson counties have expressed concern about a loss of employment and property-tax revenue for schools.

Entergy Arkansas maintains that it will save millions in legal fees from current and unknown future legal challenges related to the operations of its coal-fired plants if it agrees to shut them down.

“We continue to believe that settlement … is a very good outcome for all of our stakeholde­rs,” said Entergy Arkansas spokesman Keri Case. It is in the “best economic interest” of the customers, employees and communitie­s, Case said.

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