D.O.E. Continues to Lose Teachers as Eeducators Balk at G.E.R.S. Deductions, USVI Cost of Living
If youve been a reader on The Consortium over the years, the following story will most likely serve as déjà vu: The Department of Education continues to lose teachers who leave the territorys education system to seek better opportunities on the U.S. mainland and elsewhere, including more attractive benefits. The Government Employees Retirement System, which accounts for a sizable deduction from the salaries of local government employees, has also been a big turnoff, leading D.O.E. to continue its seemingly losing battle of retaining educators.
Thats according to D.O.E. Commissioner Nominee Racquel Berry-Benjamin, who relayed the gloomy but familiar news to lawmakers during a Committee on Education and Workforce Development hearing Wednesday.
Between August 31, 2018 and February 2019, a total of 91 teachers left D.O.E. Thats more than the same period last year, when 80 teachers left the territory. Exacerbating an already daunting problem, 54 teachers have been out on sick leave since January, complaining of mold and other issues caused by dilapidating learning facilities. The department is using the substitute pool of teachers, which consists of mostly retired educators, to help lessen the crisis. However, the pool of retired educators continue to diminish with each passing year: In 2018, there were 150 educators who made up the substitute pool, with 62 in the St. Croix District and 88 in the St. Thomas-St. John District. Today, however, there are only 53 teachers who make up the substitute pool a decline of 64.67 percent year-over-year with 28 in the St. Thomas-St. John District and 25 in St. Croix, according to Ms. Berry-Benjamin.
Even as the department continues to hemorrhage teachers, the D.O.E. commissioner nominee said the department has had a hard time with recruitment, a problem she blamed in part on the local governments and the territorys economic woes. [D.O.E.] is still faced with challenges partially due to our central government and economic environment, Ms. Berry-Benjamin said. Other issues hampering successful recruitment of additional teachers, she said, include the cost of living in the territory; a decline of individuals entering the teaching profession locally and nationally; the state of the Government Employee Retirement System (GERS); affordable housing; and an inability to compete with other jurisdictions offering monetary incentives for their teacher shortage areas, including sign-on bonuses and refer-a-friend programs.
Read more: https://viconsortium.com/education/d-o-e-continues-to-lose-teachers-as-educators-balk-at-g-e-r-s-deductions-usvi-cost-of-living/