Schools

What VA, DC Teachers Earn: Pay Stub Photo Sparks Discussion

Elisabeth Milich posted her pay stub to call attention to low teacher pay. How do Virginia and DC teachers stack up nationally?

When an Arizona teacher recently posted a photo of her pay stub on social media, it prompted a national discussion over what teachers should be paid, perhaps the most debated educational topic other than school safety. Low pay prompted teachers in West Virginia to go on strike for nine days. Virginia teachers fare slightly better than some of their counterparts, while educators in the District of Columbia earn considerably more.

According to the National Education Association, Washington, D.C., has the fourth-highest average salary for teachers in the country at $75,810 in 2016. Their average salary increased .4 percent in 2016 from the year before. In Virginia, teachers earn an average of $50,835 a year, according to the NEA's information, which ranks it at the 30th lowest overall salary. The last raise for Virginia teachers was .6 percent.

The organization says teachers in neighboring Maryland have the eighth-highest average salary at $66,456 a year.

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The National Education Association – the largest national teacher's organization – reports the average teacher salary around the country is $58,353. That was up 1.3 percent from 2015.

New York teachers had the highest average salary in 2016 at $79,152 and South Dakota had the lowest at $42,025.

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Teachers in Arizona are considering a strike. One of those teachers went on Facebook last week to draw attention to low pay and working conditions that she said are in desperate need of improvement.

"Something must be done," wrote Elisabeth Milich, a second-grade teacher in Paradise Valley outside of Phoenix. "Otherwise our poor children will be taught by unqualified, burned out, and just plain bad teachers!"

Milich's post included her recent pay stub to show just how much she makes. The stub highlights what he annual salary was and what it will be now that she has taken some professional development classes.
Her salary went to $35,621.25 from $35,490.

"I actually laughed when I saw the old salary vs. the new one," she wrote on Facebook. I mean, really, I need a college degree for this? I paid 80,000 for a college degree, I then paid several hundred more to transfer my certification to Az.

"I buy every roll of tape I use, every paper clip I use, every sharpie I grade with, every snack I feed kids who don't have them."

Milich wrote that without her husband's income, she could never afford to be a teacher in Arizona.

Patch researched how Milich's salary compares to the average in Arizona and the rest of the country. The NEA says that her salary is well below the state's average of $47,218.

"No one goes into teaching for the money," Milich wrote. "But we do need to eat and have a home!
"I'm sad for my single mom teacher friends working 3 jobs to make ends meet!"

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Reporting by Patch Editor Colin Miner

Photo via ShutterStock

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