Durham Public Schools will reduce raises given to some staff. In its place, all classified staff – nearly 1,900 employees – will get an 11% raise.
The Durham Board of Education came to that decision Thursday night after hours of debate. Some staff, including cafeteria workers and bus mechanics, had received larger raises last year. But DPS later said those came in error.
Board member Jessica Carda-Auten said she wanted to be fair to all staff.
“My concern is that if we move forward with paying some staff at higher than market rates, we are hurting other staff,” she said.
DPS staff told the board the 11% raise was the highest that the system could afford.
The decision from the Durham Board of Education comes after nearly a month of protests and coordinated responses from staff across DPS, including bus drivers and teachers. It began when hundreds of classified staff received emails in January from the district saying their pay would be significantly demoted due to an "error." In response to that, some bus drivers elected not to work on Jan. 17, leaving s scrambling.
At a town hall the next day – about 1,300 employees, including many instructional assistants, cafeteria workers, physical therapists, transportation managers and maintenance staff.
In Catty Moore threatened that students would have to make-up days later in the year if teachers and staff staged another sick-out.
Education reporter Liz Schlemmer contributed to this report.