Anonymous wrote:I don’t mind the pay increase because the $32,000 they make is way too little for the amount of time they spend. They have lots of meetings and people email and call them and expect immediate constituent responses. I hope the pay increase means some regular people can now try for the job, not just connected politician wannabes.
The law limits when they can give themselves raises and they haven’t had one since 2015. There’s only 12 of them so it makes no sense to compare it to staff raises.
Anonymous wrote:are you volunteering?Anonymous wrote:Why are school board members paid at all? In many states, it is a volunteer position. It should not be a paid thing.
are you volunteering?Anonymous wrote:Why are school board members paid at all? In many states, it is a volunteer position. It should not be a paid thing.
a school district the size of Fairfax county should hav3 a full time school boardAnonymous wrote:With next to no advance notice the School Board is proposing to award themselves 77% pay increases to over $60K at tomorrow night’s meeting.
They’ve clearly turned what was intended to be a part-time job into a full-time job by scheduling meetings at times that discourage people with real jobs from seeking office. But they haven’t done anything that warrants this type of pay increase. It seems obscene.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The entire School Board approach to education policy needs to be done away with. What are the benefits to having an elected board who only get their position through name recognition and political party fundraising?
We'd be far better off having real professionals with real degrees who are hired competitively into Board-like roles to represent each district. This would also remove bias and conflict of interest as each representative would likely be independent instead of having hidden agendas for their children's pyramids.
I remember when the SB wasn’t an elected position and so many people were thankful that it was changing to an elected one.
That was decades ago and whatever hopes people had that elected members would turn out to be an improvement have long since been dashed. You could not come up with a worse group of people than the current members - and the way in which they are going about increasing their own salaries is just more evidence of this. They stick kids in trailers and want to be paid more than many full-time employees. They are disgusting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The entire School Board approach to education policy needs to be done away with. What are the benefits to having an elected board who only get their position through name recognition and political party fundraising?
We'd be far better off having real professionals with real degrees who are hired competitively into Board-like roles to represent each district. This would also remove bias and conflict of interest as each representative would likely be independent instead of having hidden agendas for their children's pyramids.
I remember when the SB wasn’t an elected position and so many people were thankful that it was changing to an elected one.
That was decades ago and whatever hopes people had that elected members would turn out to be an improvement have long since been dashed. You could not come up with a worse group of people than the current members - and the way in which they are going about increasing their own salaries is just more evidence of this. They stick kids in trailers and want to be paid more than many full-time employees. They are disgusting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The entire School Board approach to education policy needs to be done away with. What are the benefits to having an elected board who only get their position through name recognition and political party fundraising?
We'd be far better off having real professionals with real degrees who are hired competitively into Board-like roles to represent each district. This would also remove bias and conflict of interest as each representative would likely be independent instead of having hidden agendas for their children's pyramids.
I remember when the SB wasn’t an elected position and so many people were thankful that it was changing to an elected one.
Anonymous wrote:The entire School Board approach to education policy needs to be done away with. What are the benefits to having an elected board who only get their position through name recognition and political party fundraising?
We'd be far better off having real professionals with real degrees who are hired competitively into Board-like roles to represent each district. This would also remove bias and conflict of interest as each representative would likely be independent instead of having hidden agendas for their children's pyramids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are school board members paid at all? In many states, it is a volunteer position. It should not be a paid thing.
I think they should get some pay, but I’m not sure how much. It’s a lot of time and responsibility for no pay at all.
They meet a lot and their meetings run long but I don’t see why their should get paid more just so every member can keep weighing in on every random honorary resolution or so people like Laura Jane Cohen and Karl Frisch can blather on in public about their own sexuality. It’s not like they use their time wisely or focus on academics or basic operations.