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Magistrate
recommends District make changes to health proposal,
Aronowitz says changes “don’t go far enough”
The Special
Magistrate found M-DCPS’ health insurance costs would cause teachers to
“face financial asphyxiation” and recommended the District implement
changes to their proposal in his decision issued on Monday.
Mark I. Lurie noted
the District’s offer, which requires teachers to pay for a portion of
their health insurance, would cause teachers in their first ten years of
service (First Decade Teachers) undue hardships and a loss of salary
based on negotiated raises versus insurance costs.
The magistrate’s
recommendation includes:
- "First
Decade Teachers" receive flex dollars eliminated under the School
Board's plan;
- "First
Decade Teachers" do not pay the 13.1 percent increase for dependent care
coverage;
- Other
provisions
of proposal Scenario 8 remain in place, including the increased employee
cost for the POS plan held by the majority of the bargaining unit.
The magistrate also
noted the “First Decade Teachers” had the least investment in seniority
and would be compelled to seek employment elsewhere. “The risk that the
District runs from depriving the First Decade Teachers of
financial oxygen is that some will succumb,” Lurie writes in his
decision.
United Teachers of
Dade President Karen Aronowitz was pleased that the magistrate
recognized how poorly teachers were paid but felt his recommended
changes fell short.
“Those that remain
cannot be shortchanged because they chose to remain in the profession,”
Aronowitz said. “We will never pit teacher against teacher in a plan
that does not protect everyone.”
The magistrate’s
recommendation now goes before the School Board for a vote. Aronowitz
urges the board members to find the money for health insurance for
2008.
“Our teachers and
our Education Support Professionals must be this district’s top
priority. Unless teachers are in place, all the programs in the world
will not educate our students,” Aronowitz said. “It takes teachers, and
it takes this district making our teachers able to stay in Miami-Dade
County.”
The School Board’s
next meeting is scheduled for Wednesday, April 16 at 1:00 p.m.
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