From Deseret News archives:
Schools rehiring retirees
Districts are desperate due to teacher shortage
School districts often hire retirees from other school districts, mainly to address a daunting teacher shortage.
"It's actually deepened the pool of teachers, which is something we desperately need," said Martin Bates, assistant to the superintendent on legal matters in Granite School District. "We have a teacher shortage. We are in crisis."
The practice is "fairly permitted within statute" and is "not an area of focus" for legislators wanting to tighten hiring practices, House Speaker Greg Curtis, R-Sandy, said.
Still, Bates said he will watch legislation closely to make sure schools' practice doesn't become a casualty of the actions of a few.
Utah schools will need more than 44,000 new teachers a 23 percent increase by 2014, according to the Utah Education Supply and Demand Study 2004-05 issued last winter. Fast-growing districts could need to grow their teaching force by 60 percent.
School districts are feeling the effects now. Jordan needed to hire 750 teachers to start the school year more than twice the typical vacancies after 260 retired following retirement benefit changes precipitated by new federal and state accounting rules. It had about 20 vacancies at the beginning of the school year, but those since have been filled, district spokeswoman Melinda Colton said.
Right now, people can teach for 30 years, then retire and go to work in a different school district, collecting retirement benefits and pulling a paycheck at the same time. They can work for the same school district if they wait six months, or do other work for less than 20 hours a week, like substitute teaching.
Districts lately have been recruiting retirees. Jordan last summer sent letters to 480 teachers who had retired in the past few years to see if they'd be interested in returning to the classroom. Some Davis retirees reported getting up to three letters from Jordan District.
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