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Teacher pay raise signed by Gov. Bryant

Teacher pay raise signed by Gov. Bryant

By: Magnolia Tribune - April 23, 2014

Gov. Phil Bryant signs bill for pay increases, merit raises for Mississippi teachers

Mississippi public schoolteachers can look forward to a $2,500 pay increase over the next two years on top of normal annual raises, with Gov. Phil Bryant signing a bill Tuesday that he says he hopes will aid performance.

“What we are trying to do with this bill today is get the best and the brightest in the classroom,” he told reporters at the Capitol.

The bill includes a $1,500 raise July 1 and a $1,000 raise that would follow in the budget year beginning July 1, 2015. Teachers also will be eligible for merit payments in 2016-17.

In that year, schools will get merit payments, to be split among all teachers and employees, but excluding administrators such as principals. Schools that rate an “A” on the state’s A-to-F system will get $100 per student; schools that move up one grade will get the same. Schools rated “B” will get $75 per student.

Teachers also will get their yearly step raise of at least $495. Those with advanced degrees get larger annual raises.

Mississippi had the second-lowest average teacher pay in the nation in 2013 at $41,994, above only South Dakota, according to a survey by the National Education Association.

The push for higher pay originated with House Speaker Philip Gunn, R-Clinton.

“If we are to retain those teachers and get them to stay in the field of education, we have got to give them higher salaries,” Gunn said.

Gulflive
4/22/14

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Magnolia Tribune

This article was produced by Magnolia Tribune staff.