Anonymous wrote:I am a MCPS teacher at about year 20, so I get $0 for the next few steps.
After DCPS and PGPS recently got like $10k I expected MCPS to match. Instead the budget proposal came out. When I did the math, I realized the average teacher was looking at only about $3k or so. Which is far less than inflation and what happened at every other school district I could identify locally. I was hoping that some of the expiring COVID funds would be turned into bonuses, steps, or COLA's but instead MCPS gives a puny ~3% for this year and next with no step increases.
It takes 10 years to vest in the Maryland pension now, and you have to work for 35 years to reach full retirement. So, if a new teacher is planning to leave education, it makes sense to get out as earlier as possible to restart a new career/retirement fund. It's just not worth it for a lot of people unless you were hired before 2011. That's when the new pension system kicked in. Those hired before 2011 are usually able to retire around 60 or so with a higher pension. So, the golden handcuffs kick in.
Less than $60k for a 1st year teacher is just painful to justify in this area. It's not what I would consider a competitive liveable wage for a college graduate with student loans to pay off.
I am just not really sure what the endgame for MCPS is here in terms of negotiating wages. Current staff are complaining and new staff are getting harder to find. I see new teachers leaving at much higher rates than ever before.
Yes, I'm on year 19 so I don't think I get a step increase again until year 25? They definitely have me by the golden handcuffs. I remember when I was hired it was a honor to get a contract with MCPS. They were considered the best of the best. Now it's just abysmal. I hate what this system has become in the last five years. The few kids who are always out of control make classrooms disruptive and miserable for the students who really, really want to learn. Hats off to our paras who support and cover classes daily. As other posters have mentioned, so many sub jobs don't get picked up daily. I work in a medium size elementary school and I'd say about 10 -20% of sub jobs actually get picked up. Otherwise it's our paras covering.