Calgary school board changes tune on top brass pay hike - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 12:54 PM | Calgary | -12.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Calgary

Calgary school board changes tune on top brass pay hike

After concerns were raised about pay hikes for Calgary Board of Education staff, officials have announced top administrators will not be getting a raise but roughly 210 non-unionized and exempt employees are still eligible for salary increases or bonuses if their supervisor believes it is warranted.

Pay hikes for Calgary Board of Education administrators would be bad timing, union boss says

CBE changes tune on pay hikes

12 years ago
Duration 2:03
The Calgary public school board has decided to freeze the salaries on top administrators.

After concerns were raised about pay hikes for Calgary Board of Education staff, officials have announced top administrators will not be getting a pay hike.

That counts for roughly10 members of the senior team, who will have their salaries frozen, but roughly 210 non-unionizedand exemptemployees are still eligible for salary increases or bonuses if their supervisor believes it is warranted.

CBE exempt employeesincludepositionssuch as engineers, executive administrative assistantsor advisors in human resources.

Board chair Pat Cochrane says even though money is tight they need to keep salaries competitive.

"Just because you don't have a union that protects your rights doesn't mean that we should just say you don't get anything while unionized members get to move up a grid," she said.

The"potential expenditure" was approved in May 2012 for the current fiscal year which runs Sept. 1, 2012, to Aug. 31, 2013 but was given a second look at a meeting on Tuesday.

Trustee Sheila Taylor voted against approving the pay raises.

"We're seeing all sorts of departmentshealth, advanced educationreally tightening their belts and so I think it's a time for us ... to be taking a hard look at our budgets to ensure we're keeping dollars in classrooms where they belong," she said.

Concerns raised

Earlier Friday, critics questioned pay raises for CBE administrators because trusteesmade thedecisionat an in-camera meeting and no details were available as to how many people will get pay hikes or how much.

The Alberta Teachers' Association local president Frank Bruseker said thetiming was bad, as the CBE rejected the proposed provincewide agreement for teacherson Wednesday.

CBE chair Pat Cochrane said the provincial teacher agreement was not a good deal for students and it reduced the flexibility of school boards across the province.

"To do this is in the same meeting where, on one hand they turn down the proposed agreement for teachers, and then on the other hand say, 'And now were going to turn around and provide more money for senior staff,'" he said.

"Thats the kind of thing, the optics are just all wrong. You know, leadership is leadership."

Bruseker said it was inappropriate for board trustees to make decisions about administration pay behind closed doors, while teacher pay negotiations have been very open to the public.