The Edison school district is bringing back nearly half of the 337 jobs it eliminated under budget cuts this year.
The township’s teachers union last week agreed to salary cuts and changes in its medical benefits for the upcoming school year, giving Edison — Middlesex County’s largest school system — the money to reinstate 158 positions that were slated to disappear.
The deal comes in a year when massive state aid cuts and a tight economy caused cash-strapped districts across New Jersey to slash jobs. Of the state’s 588 districts, 140 have struck some sort of deal with teachers unions to bring back staff.
Budget woes rocked Edison. In addition to the job cuts, the school board also eliminated many programs — such as middle-school sports and full-day kindergarten — and raised taxes about $190 for the average homeowner. Critics cried that the cuts would severely damage the township’s lauded public education system.
But under the union’s agreement, the biggest group to benefit is the district’s teaching aides, who largely work with special-needs students. Edison will reinstate 123 paraprofessional aides and 10 teacher aides — all but four of the 137 aides who were on the chopping block. Had the deal not been reached, the district would have outsourced those jobs.
The deal calls for all of the union’s 1,585 teachers, aides and other employees to make sacrifices. All members will start paying 1.5 percent of their salaries towards their health plans.
Paraprofessional aides will take a 25-percent pay cut, as well. Library aides will take a 20-percent reduction.
http://www.nj.com/news/local/index.ssf/ … _cuts.htmlThe only reason why the Teacher's Aides are the "largest beneficiary" is because
they actually have their fucking job back.
Also, while I'm here, outsourcing would've been a
huge fiasco - some company that hires kids off the street for $9.50/hr? Turnover would be through the roof, and (having a parent who works in one of those classrooms and knows the students in the program) been detrimental to the program.
"Sacrifices" - awww, the teachers didn't get their yearly pay raise, bawwwww.
The whole reason this was a big deal in the first place was that the teachers union originally said "no" to the first round of budget cut proposals - then the district wasn't going to receive state money... then threats of pay freezes.....

I'm not even going to touch the political shit-fiasco of a school board over there.