EUSD board OKs retirement bonus
By: SHAYNA CHABNER - Staff Writer
Officials seek clear picture of available positions for 2008-09 | ∞
ESCONDIDO ---- Escondido Union School District employees who notify the district by March 26 of their plans to retire before the next school year are eligible for a one-time bonus under a plan approved by trustees Thursday night.
The agreement, a first for the district, is an attempt by officials to pin down the number of positions that will be available in the coming school year as they face millions of dollars in state funding cuts, Bob Leon, the assistant superintendent of human resources, said.
It's one of many cost-saving options ---- that could include cutting staff ---- being weighed to cope with an expected $12 million loss in revenues from the 2008-09 district budget, Leon said.
"This is kind of a different concept that we are bringing forward to you," Leon told trustees during their regular board meeting. "It's not an early retirement incentive, but an early notification incentive."
After the meeting, Leon said: "It's to get an idea of who is returning and who isn't. (If we knew a person was retiring) it could make room for a teacher who, instead of leaving, can remain."
State law requires that school districts notify teachers by March 15 if there will not be a job available the following school year.
School districts are one segment of many government agencies statewide looking at a nearly 10 percent cut in funding under a proposal Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger put forth in January. The proposed cuts are part of an effort to erase an estimated $14.5 billion revenue shortfall, which is expected to grow.
The state has tightened its belt on some state spending in the current year.
Last week, lawmakers decided to push about $2 billion in expenditures to the next fiscal year and bank roughly $507 million in funds for California's K-12 public schools and its colleges and universities for the rest of the year, ending June 30.
Under the school district's incentive plan, which has to be approved by the district's two unions, employees who tell the district by March 8 that they will be retiring for the 2008-09 school year will receive a $1,000 bonus, Leon said.
Employees who notify the district about such plans between March 8 and March 26 will receive a $500 bonus.
Leon said district officials would like to have as clear of an idea as possible about the number of planned retirements before they have to decide how many teachers will receive layoff notices.
Meanwhile, the district has organized a budget communications committee to help spread information about the elementary and middle school district's financial status and recommend possible cost-saving measures. The committee includes parents, teachers, nonteaching staff members and district officials.
Officials have added two public meetings to their calendar, one next Thursdsay and one on March 5, to discuss proposed cuts.
Updates on next year's budget, meeting agendas and a copy of the 2007-08 budget are available on the district's Web site at www.eusd4kids.org.
Contact staff writer Shayna Chabner at (760) 740-5416or schabner@nctimes.com.
OMG wrote on Feb 22, 2008 12:42 AM:Can't we give a bonus for early retirement without union approval? Can't we give teachers bonuses for better performance? Oh yeah, teacher unions can dictate their compensation policy. Ah, the value of unions...
Bonus? wrote on Feb 22, 2008 5:52 AM:How can the State of California afford to give the retiring teachers a bonus??? We are broke.
Union member wrote on Feb 22, 2008 8:48 AM:Just so you know, OMG, that IS the value of unions. At least you recognize it, even if you don't understand it. And, Bonus, they give senior (high paid) teachers a $1000 to retire and then save many thousands by hiring junior (low paid) replacements. This explains why you are not on the school board and they are.
A teacher, home sick with the flu wrote on Feb 22, 2008 10:37 AM:How can this even be viewed as an incentive to retire?
If a teacher is considering retirement, he would be looking at his monthly retirement income to decide if he could afford to retire. If working for another year or two boosts that monthly income for the rest of his life, how on earth would being compensated with $1,000 be any incentive to hang up his teaching career earlier? What's going to happen here is that the teachers who were already planning to retire will turn in their paperwork and each get an additional grand in their pockets.
Randy wrote on Feb 22, 2008 11:17 AM:A $1,000 bonus to retire early- are you serious? This is an insult to our intelligence!
SDUSD Teacher wrote on Feb 22, 2008 3:37 PM:To Home Sick Teacher, I don't think it is meant to be an incentive to retire, I think they just want a head count of those that know they are going to retire.
OMG wrote on Feb 22, 2008 6:36 PM:By bargaining for all and not individuals, you are losing many teachers and teacher candidates who are well above the norm who expect at least merit pay. Unions are great for equalizing workers, but I for one do not want all teachers treated equally. Fire those who consistently underperform, such as the bottom 5%, and reward those who outperform.
We give cash awards for students in the form of scholarships and grants -- where's the rewards for outstanding teachers?
Reader wrote on Feb 22, 2008 9:19 PM:"It's not an early retirement incentive, but an early notification incentive."
I can't believe some of you are teachers. The incentive is a $1000 for notifying the district that a teacher intends to retire at the end of this school year so that they can retain more teachers and not give the RIF notices on March 15.
Read the whole article, please.
fellow teacher wrote on Mar 1, 2008 3:46 PM:with the freeze on all categorical monies...why are we offering money to people who are planning on retiring anyways...seems like a waste of money. Teachers are well aware of the issues facing us today...if they know they are going to retire, they should just come forward and do so without extra compensation. WE are a community, a family...let us be treated like one.
First name only. Comments including last names, contact addresses, email addresses or phone numbers will be deleted. All comments are screened before they appear online, so please keep them brief. Comments reflect the views of those commenting and not necessarily those of the North County Times or its staff writers. Click here to view additional comment policies.
Today's Stories
- REAL ESTATE: SoCal bloggers fight housing 'bailout' (3177)
- REGION: Just two police departments say they will offer a grace period on cell phone law (2644)
- ESCONDIDO: Police investigating Escondido teen's homicide (2611)
- ESCONDIDO: Teen slaying fits gang profile (2546)
- ESCONDIDO: Police: Freeway stop nets suspect in fatal shooting (2496)
Advertisement

