In a bipartisan 16-8 vote, the Pennsylvania House Education
Committee has greenlighted a bill that would eliminate state-mandated seniority
protections for teachers.
HB 1722, sponsored by state Rep. Tim Krieger,
R-Westmoreland, would require districts to base layoffs on a teacher's
performance as measured by the state's new teacher evaluation system.
Now, 499 of Pennsylvania's 500 school districts are required
to base teacher layoff and recall decisions on the inverse order of seniority,
sometimes referred to as "last in, first out."
The Philadelphia School Reform Commission, flexing its
"special powers," suspended the state code that protects teachers
based on longevity. The school district has called on the state Supreme Court
to provide a ruling that would affirm that the SRC has this right.
The Philadelphia Federation of Teachers has petitioned the
court to reject the district's position – arguing that work-rule changes should
be negotiated at the bargaining table. The union's contract expired at the end
of August; since then, negotiations have screeched along without any signs of
progress.
HB 1722 also would allow districts to eliminate staff based
on budgetary shortfalls. Aside from Philadelphia, state school districts now
can order layoffs only when student enrollment declines or by eliminating
specific programs.
Critics of the status quo say this leads many Pennsylvania
districts to make wholesale cuts to programs such as art, music and
kindergarten when revenues decline.
All Republicans on the education committee voted to advance
the bill. Two Democrats, James Clay, D- Philadelphia, and Jake Wheatley,
D-Allegheny, joined them.
Krieger, the bill's sponsor, said the measure will
"protect good teachers and make schools better."
"If you're a young teacher, and you're doing a great
job, you shouldn't be furloughed because you haven't been there that
long," he said.
Krieger lamented that the Pittsburgh School District had to
cut 16 young teachers last year who carried a "distinguished"
evaluation.
This is not an issue that has particularly affected schools
within Krieger's legislative district.
"We hear more of the complaints and more of the
requests for this, frankly, from places like Pittsburgh and Philadelphia,"
he said.
Why didn't a legislator representing one of those districts
propose the measure?
"I don't know. I guess none of them were willing to do
it," Krieger said. "And I thought it was a good idea."
Krieger's original bill proposed increasing the time it
takes teachers to earn tenure from three to five years. That provision died
before leaving committee.
Minority chair James Roebuck, D-Philadelphia, argued that
teacher seniority has "traditionally worked" and that the proposed
bill has "a lot of problems."
"I don't get the idea that somehow there's such great
teachers coming in that are largely unseasoned that are somehow trumping
well-established teachers in the classroom," he said. "I've seen very
little evidence of that."
Roebuck contends that the debate over seniority has been
manufactured by what he sees as the state's underfunding of public education.
"If you fund schools properly, you don't have to [lay
teachers off]," he said. "I think this is looking at a self-created
problem of saying, 'because we created this problem, now we've got to do
something else.'"
The state's new teacher evaluation system will grade
educators based on principal observation, evidence provided by teachers
themselves, and students' standardized test scores as averaged over a
three-year period.
Roebuck worries that the new system isn't ready.
"The problem is taking this new system that hasn't even
been fully tested or implemented and using that to make rather major decisions,"
he said.
Jonathan Cetel, executive director of the school-reform
advocacy group PennCAN, exalted the committee's action.
"The house leadership said something that I've often
heard -- that voters would be shocked to learn that this already isn't law,
that we're not already making important personnel decisions based on how well a
teacher is doing with students," said Cetel.
Gov. Tom Corbett has long supported changing teacher tenure.
Gubernatorial candidate Tom Wolf has gone on the record in
favor of the state's existing teacher seniority rules.
"Are there teachers who may not be teaching up to par?
Yeah. There are in any organization," he said at an education panel
discussion in Philadelphia in April. "The system we have now has a way to
identify those teachers and relieve them of their duties."
The bill will now go before the full House of
Representatives, where leaders have been receptive to its aims.
Source: NewsWorks
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