The public school system will consider adjusting its mix of salary and benefits, in part to improve teacher retention, administrators told the School Board on Tuesday, Nov. 13.
“We have a high floor but a low ceiling — meaning that our first steps, the bottom of our [pay] scale, tend to be higher than our surrounding jurisdictions’, but we top out sooner than other jurisdictions,” said acting CFO Dominic Turner.
For a teacher with a bachelor’s degree, Alexandria offers an entry-level salary of about $49,000, middle of the pack among 10 regional jurisdictions. Entry-level pay for teachers with master’s degrees is $56,000, third highest in the region. The maximum for teachers with a master’s is $106,000, dropping to seventh place regionally.
Overall, teachers in Alexandria receive a total compensation package valued at about $110,000 — third highest among regional competitors, and on the order of $10,000 more than six.
This is due to “a very robust fringe benefit package” in Alexandria, particularly health care, which consultants have called “a platinum-plus plan,” said Turner.
The school division offers has a zero deductible plan, which is “unheard of,” said Dr. Gregory Hutchings, Jr., the division’s superintendent.
As a result, beginning teachers might come to Alexandria to build up their résumés, only to go somewhere else where they can make more, said School Board member Ronnie Campbell. A top-shelf benefits package might become less enticing to older and more experienced teachers, especially if they’re covered under a spouse or partner’s plan anyway, said Hutchings.
“We can’t do it all, right? We’re already giving a ‘platinum-plus’ benefits package. Most people don’t even have that,” he said. “We have to start thinking about, how can we possibly repurpose some of the benefits funds to have a higher salary. … We want to recruit and retain, not just recruit.”
The administration is currently looking into a high deductible plan, said Turner.