Teacher pay will increase

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By Jerry Nowicki –
A pair of bills aiming to address the State’s teacher shortage passed the Illinois Senate Thursday, May 30.

Both bills were sponsored by Sen. Andy Manar, a Bunker Hill Democrat.

The first, House Bill 2078, raises the minimum wage for teachers to $40,000 by the 2023-2024 school year. The wage increase would be phased in, starting with a $32,076 minimum in the 2020-2021 school year, $34,576 the year after that, and $37,076 in 2022-2023. After 2024, the minimum wage will increase with the consumer price index each year.

The State’s current minimum teacher salary law of $10,000 has been unchanged since the 1980s.

The bill directs a professional review panel, established as part of an education funding overhaul in the previous General Assembly, to report on how the evidence-based funding model will be affected by the increased costs incurred by districts as part of the minimum wage increase. Manar said the panel will look for ways the state can “bridge the gap” on increased costs for those districts.

Senator Jason Barickman, a Bloomington Republican who helped advance the evidence-based model, said he thought the added expense to districts could affect the model and cause districts that cannot afford the wages to raise property taxes. He voted against the measure.

The minimum wage bill passed 45-13 and will require a concurrence from the House before going to governor J.B. Pritzker.

The Senate passed and sent to Pritzker a bill intended to address the state’s teacher shortage.

Senate Bill 1952 would eliminate the current requirement that prospective teachers take a “test of basic skills” prior to the start of their student teaching. It allows for new teachers, under certain conditions, to be reimbursed for the cost of taking a teacher performance test, known as the edTPA exam.

It removes a current prohibition against student teachers being paid for their work while raising the cap on annual teacher pay raises to six percent instead of three percent.

The House had made a minor change to the bill, but the Senate concurred in that change Wednesday, sending the bill to governor Pritzker.
— Capitol News Illinois

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