The minimum wage law that took effect Monday guarantees at least $20-per-hour for workers at fast food restaurant chains with at least 60 locations nationwide.
Read the article, it’s not educators, it’s other food service workers in CA school districts. Teachers in Cali are typically 80k starting now and by year 3-5 most are already at 100k.
Food service workers are difficult for schools because they’re typically non-full time jobs. They only work 3-4 hours a day. I’ve always been a big proponent of districts combining jobs like food service worker and campus monitor, or buss drivers and food services since they typically don’t overlap on time(s) worked. You often already see school food service workers acting as yard duties for the cafeteria anyway, may as well pay them for part of that and keep them around after for keeping an eye on campus.
I changed educator to education to better reflect what I meant. As far as I’m concerned, if you work in a school, you work in education.
And making that distinction doesn’t make the situation any better. Even if every elementary school teacher is pulling that kind of pay (they are not), defunding another aspect of the school’s ability to function is still an issue of a lack of respect for education in general - especially in America.
The very notion that a school system might lose employees to the local McDonald’s over salary is a living nightmare for future generations.
Also, while I agree with your ideas, it is currently a challenge to find a bus driver that won’t show up to work drunk or have some other issue. To say nothing of finding one that is also rated to work in a kitchen. I think a simpler solution is to properly fund the public school system and watch as most of the problems self-heal in response.
Read the article, it’s not educators, it’s other food service workers in CA school districts. Teachers in Cali are typically 80k starting now and by year 3-5 most are already at 100k.
Food service workers are difficult for schools because they’re typically non-full time jobs. They only work 3-4 hours a day. I’ve always been a big proponent of districts combining jobs like food service worker and campus monitor, or buss drivers and food services since they typically don’t overlap on time(s) worked. You often already see school food service workers acting as yard duties for the cafeteria anyway, may as well pay them for part of that and keep them around after for keeping an eye on campus.
I changed educator to education to better reflect what I meant. As far as I’m concerned, if you work in a school, you work in education.
And making that distinction doesn’t make the situation any better. Even if every elementary school teacher is pulling that kind of pay (they are not), defunding another aspect of the school’s ability to function is still an issue of a lack of respect for education in general - especially in America.
The very notion that a school system might lose employees to the local McDonald’s over salary is a living nightmare for future generations.
Also, while I agree with your ideas, it is currently a challenge to find a bus driver that won’t show up to work drunk or have some other issue. To say nothing of finding one that is also rated to work in a kitchen. I think a simpler solution is to properly fund the public school system and watch as most of the problems self-heal in response.
So is the janitor at Microsoft’s office a “tech worker?”