Stafford teachers protest change in insurance
Proposed loss of long-held health-care benefit angers school employees, who plead with School Board not to alter its policy.
By KELLY HANNON
Date published: 1/14/2004
By KELLY HANNON
A long-held health insurance benefit for Stafford school employees could disappear this month, and teachers are making sure it doesn't vanish quietly.
Waving protest signs stating "Health Proposals Equal Discrimination" and other slogans, about 20 teachers and school workers attended last night's School Board meeting to express their anger and angst over the proposed change.
At stake is a benefit employees have enjoyed for about 30 years: a 100 percent paid health-insurance premium for individual employees. For family, spouse or child coverage, staff members pay a steep monthly premium, often hundreds of dollars.
To balance the cost between employees with individual coverage and family coverage, an employee committee has recommended that the School Board change its district health-care plan.
Among the changes, employees with individual coverage who want to keep the same plan would have to pay $40 a month starting next year. However, employees could also switch to plans with different coverage and a lower monthly premium.
Losing the benefit has riled employees, who collectively spent an hour last night trying to persuade the School Board to vote against the change. Only two people spoke in support of the new plan.
Several teachers said the benefit should not be considered free. Instead, the paid premium is a hard-won benefit, they said.
"I always looked at it as something I worked very hard to earn," said Amy Mueller, a third-grade teacher at Rockhill Elementary.
Duane Graysay, a math teacher at Colonial Forge High School, used Census 2000 data to make a point. The median household income in Stafford County is $66,809, while starting salary for teachers hovers around $32,000.
School employees are having an increasingly tough time living on their salary in Stafford, Graysay said, and taking away a benefit will only increase their hardship.
Stafford Education Association President Karen Clore noted teachers and staff are publicly applauded for their hard work and success, but said words need to be backed up with financial considerations for teachers.
Earlier during the meeting, principals and assistant principals were awarded banners heralding their schools' status as fully accredited under the Virginia Standards of Learning. Banners were also awarded to schools that met the yearly progress benchmarks for the federal No Child Left Behind Act.
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Date published: 1/14/2004
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