Hundreds Of Indiana Educators Shared Their Ideas For Raising Teacher Pay. Now They Wait
Hundreds Of Indiana Educators Shared Their Ideas For Raising Teacher Pay. Now They Wait.
In the meantime, each teacher pay commission member chose an area of policy to research individually, Smith said and will share preliminary ideas with the governor and school leaders as they go. There is not another public meeting planned, but people can continue to submit ideas online.
“I think that is a long time to go without any public input, and they need to think about that,†said Sally Sloan, executive director of the American Federation of Teachers Indiana union. “If they have a report, when it comes around they should invite people to see it, read it, provide input.â€
The state’s largest teacher’s union, Indiana State Teachers Association, is calling on lawmakers to allocate part of the state’s revenue surplus to teacher salaries, saying “if teacher compensation is to be competitive with our surrounding states, we need significant investment and we need it now.â€
Indiana is so far behind neighboring states in teacher compensation that it would cost an estimated $658 million to make salaries more competitive, according to a January report. In 2016-17, Indiana teachers made an average salary of $50,554, according to the National Center for Education Statistics, but starting salaries can be as low as $30,000.
When asked by Chalkbeat, Rep. Bob Behning, an Indianapolis Republican who chairs the House Education Committee, said in an email the state’s reserves aren’t meant to be a source of ongoing revenue.  “We need to look at long-term, sustainable solutions to increase teacher pay,†he said. “I will consider all sustainable options to increase teacher pay.â€
Lawmakers could address teacher pay in the session that begins in January but is unlikely to consider any proposals with significant costs because Indiana is in the second year of a two-year budget and won’t write a new budget until 2021.
“I don’t think we’ll be able to wait until August 2020 to address these issues,†said Rachel Hathaway, the interim executive director of Teach Plus Indiana, a group that supports traditional and charter, school teachers. “At the very least, the dialogue will continue to stay at the forefront because every year we are struggling to attract and retain educators.â€
Smith said it’s “premature†to list which ideas brought to the public meeting stood out, but agreed there was “loud resonance†from teachers around reinstating salary schedules in which districts set a predetermined pay increase for teachers each year, or with each added degree or certification. However, Smith said mandating salary schedules from the state level might be an overstep.
“It’s a real challenge to balance what state government should be doing versus what locally elected school boards should be providing in [the] way of governance,†he said. “School districts are a very diverse set of organizations. So finding solutions that don’t create inequities is a challenge.â€
Local unions said more funding from the state would give districts the ability to individually bring back the schedule.
“Teachers no longer have confidence that their pay will go up if they advance professionally and stay in the profession over the course of their working lives,†said Indiana State Teachers Association Executive Director Dan Holub. “These problems are fixable if we can get past ideological lines and respect educators.
Other ideas that teachers surfaced during last month’s public meetings included potentially lowering rising insurance costs by creating a statewide plan, reallocating fines for passing stopped school buses from city budgets to schools, and giving new teachers grant money to outfit their classrooms.
Earlier this year, Holcomb directed the state to dip into its $2 billion reserves to pay off a teacher pension liability for schools. That move was expected to save schools millions that could then be put toward salaries but was also criticized for not benefiting all schools equally and not requiring that the savings be put toward teacher salaries.
Behning said that in the upcoming legislative session, he will look at additional ways to “cut overhead costs and drive more dollars to teachers’ pockets.†By law, schools are encouraged to put 85% of the state funding they receive toward the classroom rather than toward administrative costs.
“In some schools, only 60% of funding makes it to the classroom, taking away critical dollars from student instruction and teacher pay,†Behning said. “Knowing how schools are doing with this goal will shed light on other options to increase teacher pay.â€
Are You In-It To Win-It?
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USI To Honor Achievements, Present Awards At Annual Faculty Convocation
The University of Southern Indiana will hold its annual Faculty Convocation at 2:30 p.m. Friday, October 11 in Carter Hall located in University Center West on the USI campus. The event is free and open to the public as space is available, and all are invited to attend and honor the USI faculty with their presence.
The Convocation, which was first held at USI in 2017, is a formal ceremony to highlight and celebrate the accomplishments of the USI faculty. Proceedings will include a keynote address from Dr. Katie Ehlman, professor of gerontology, and the recognition of newly tenured and promoted faculty, emeriti faculty, faculty members who have completed their terminal degrees and those who have reached 25 years of service at the University.
During the ceremony, the following annual awards will be presented:
University of Southern Indiana Distinguished Professor AwardÂ
Dr. Ernest H. Hall, Jr., professor of management, will be named the 2019 USI Distinguished Professor. Hall began his career at USI in 1992 as the director of the Small Business Institute. In 1998, he became chair of the Management and Marketing Department; director of the Master of Business Administration (MBA) program in 2000, as well as the associate dean for what is now the Romain College of Business, both until 2004. In 2012, he served five years again as director of the MBA program. As the director of the USI MBA program, he played a key role in laying the foundation for the launch of the highly successful online MBA program.
The Distinguished Professor Award was established in 1983 and is USI’s highest award given in recognition of significant achievement in teaching, scholarship and service. As a recipient, Hall will receive a $7,000 stipend plus a $3,000 faculty development grant underwritten by generous donors to the USI Foundation. He also will deliver the address at the Romain College of Business and College of Liberal Arts Fall Commencement Ceremony.
H. Lee Cooper Core Curriculum Teaching Award
Dr. Sakina M. Hughes, associate professor of history, will be named the 2019 recipient of the H. Lee Cooper Core Curriculum Teaching Award. Hughes began her career at USI in 2013 after serving as the Dubois-Mandela-Rodney Postdoctoral Fellow: Department of Afroamerican and African Studies at the University of Michigan. Currently at USI, along with being associate professor, she is the assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts and the director of Africana Studies. She is also a board member for the Vanderburgh County Historical Society, co-chair of the Nelson Mandela Social Justice Commemoration Committee, and was the founding president of the USI Faculty Women of Color in the Academy.
The H. Lee Cooper Core Curriculum Teaching Award was established in 2000 and honors a USI faculty member whose work in University Core Courses (UCC) has been especially creative and successful in furthering UCC goals. As a recipient, Hughes will receive a $4,000 stipend and a $2,000 faculty development grant underwritten by longtime and generous University friends, Ann and H. Lee Cooper III. She will also deliver the address at the Pott College of Science, Engineering, and Education and the College of Nursing and Health Professions Commencement Ceremony in December.
Sydney and Sadelle Berger Faculty Community Service Award
Dr. Srishti Srivastava, assistant professor of computer science, will be named the 2019 recipient of the Sydney L. and Sadelle Berger Faculty Community Service Award. Srivastava established the Girls Who Code club, which is aimed at creating greater interest and skills development in computer programming for middle school girls. The club is working to close the gender gap in technology and to change the image of what a programmer looks like. She also established the Bro Code club, designed to work with middle school boys to create interest and skills in computer programming. Both clubs involve students representing three Indiana counties and seven area schools.
The Sydney L. and Sadelle Berger Faculty Community Service Award were established in 1997 and recognize a USI faculty member for distinguished community service to groups, agencies, and institutions external to the University of Southern Indiana.
USI Foundation Outstanding Teaching Award by New Faculty
Dr. Crystal Steltenpohl ’11, assistant professor of psychology, will receive the USI Foundation Outstanding Faculty Teaching Award by New Faculty, which recognizes truly exceptional teaching performance by a new faculty member in his or her discipline, and whose primary responsibility is teaching at the University of Southern Indiana. She graduated from USI in 2017 with a bachelor’s degree in English and psychology and began her career there in 2017. Steltenpohl is the faculty advisor for the Psychology Club and is a member of the Equity, Diversity and Inclusion Council, both since 2018. Among other involvement, she received an Early Career Faculty Research Grant from USI to work with Dr. Katie Daniels and Dr. Kyle Mara on creating a video game to teach high school and undergraduate students about research methods.
USI Foundation Outstanding Faculty Teaching Award
Dr. Daria P. Sevastianova, associate professor of economics, will receive the USI Foundation Outstanding Faculty Teaching Award, which recognizes truly exceptional teaching performance by a faculty member in his or her discipline, and whose primary responsibility is teaching at the University of Southern Indiana. Sevenstianova began her career at USI in 2007 and is currently the faculty advisor for the Economics Club. She has served on various committees within the Romain College of Business and for the University. Since 2012, Sevastianova has worked on a sister city partnership between Evansville and Osnabrück, Germany which has benefited USI students in multiple capacities. She serves as the director for the Center for Economic Education and has used this opportunity to connect students with the Federal Reserve Bank in St. Louis on multiple projects.
USI Foundation Outstanding Faculty Teaching Award by Adjunct Faculty
Mahlon E. Powell ’11, adjunct instructor in Liberal Arts, is the recipient of the USI Foundation Outstanding Faculty Teaching Award by Adjunct Faculty, which recognizes truly exceptional teaching performance by an adjunct faculty member in his or her discipline.
The USI faculty will formally process across the Quad to Carter Hall from the USI Performance Center at 2:30 p.m., and a reception will follow the event in University Center West. For more information about the event, contact Sheree Seib at sheree.seib@usi.edu or 812-461-5419.
State Funds Continue To Grow, One Revenue Source In Particular Is Underwater: Casinos
By Brandon Barger
TheStatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS- While overall state funds continue to grow, one revenue source, in particular, is underwater: Riverboat casinos.
Revenues from the state’s 10 casinos were down 31.2 percent from what had been expected in August, according to monthly revenue report released by the State Budget Agency. And that represents a 26.9 percent drop from August 2018.
In all, the casinos brought in around $7.8 million, well short of the $11.4 million the state had been hoping for.
The shortfalls continue a trend. Matt Bell, the president and CEO of the Casino Association of Indiana, said that this loss has been happening since 2009.
“That drop is a reflection of a number of things, perhaps most importantly, increased competition from neighboring states,†Bell said. “Ohio’s entry into the markets, the continued expansion in Illinois and Michigan all had an impact on us.â€
Bell said people also seem to be wary about the economy right now, to the point where people are saving their money instead of going to the casinos.
Meanwhile, the two racinos – the combination horse-racing tracks and casinos located in Shelbyville and Anderson — saw an increase in revenues. They brought in $8.6 million in August, which was 11.5 percent more than expected. They are up 1.6 percent from a year ago.
Bell credited that improvement through a combination of the geography of the racinos – as they are located in Central Indiana — as well as promotions by the operators running them. Those numbers likely will grow when live dealers are allowed by the state at the racinos beginning in January.
Bell also pointed out that gambling revenues to the state likely will grow now that sports wagering became legal in Indiana on Sept. 1.
Overall, Indiana brought in more than $1.1 billion in August, with incomes, sales and corporate taxes all showing increases. That was 4.9 percent more than anticipated and 5.1 percent more than the state took in a year ago.
FOOTNOTE: Brandon Barger is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a  news website powered by Franklin College journalists.
Carver Community Organization 74th Annual Meeting and Luncheon September 27
Carver Community Organization 74th Annual Meeting and Luncheon September 27
Carver Community Organization will celebrate its 74th year at its annual meeting and luncheon Friday at 11:30 a.m. at the Deaconess Orthopedic Neuroscience Hospital Pavilion Room located at 4011 Gateway Blvd., in Newburgh.
This year, Carver celebrates “Milestones in Leadership†with special guest speaker and Evansville native Ondra Berry, a Carver alumnus.
Berry is a 32-year veteran of the Nevada Air National Guard and was named Nevada’s 30th Adjutant General and the first African American to hold the in August. He is retired from the positions of senior vice president of organizational culture & engagement for MGM Resorts International, and assistant chief of police for the Reno Police Department administration division.
Berry, a graduate of Harrison High School and the University of Evansville, is a board member of the University of Evansville, and No Opportunity Wasted, a college preparatory program which gives ambitious high school students more exposure to higher education opportunities.
St. Vincent Evansville Birth Announcements for September 23, 2019
St. Vincent Evansville Birth Announcements for September 23, 2019
Karen and Gregory Haller, Evansville, Son, Jack Anthony, September 6
Tyler and Zach Greenwell, Boonville, IN, Son, Crew Logen, September 6
Hannah and Gregory Dick, Madisonville, KY, Daughter, Veronica Jane, September 6
Erica Back and Luigi Federico, Henderson, KY, Son, Panfilo Luca, September 7
Brianna and Michael Jarboe, Bristow, IN, Daughter, Ada Grace, September 7
Seira Cundiff, Evansville, Daughter, Teira Rain, September 7
Kailee Richard and Paul Chandler, Vincennes, IN, Daughter, Lux Monroe, September 9
Haylee Fisher and Wyatt Ellison, Evansville, Son, Bristan Lane, September 9
Kyndal Thompson and Tristan Brown, Evansville, Son, Julian James Mychael, September 9
Stephanie Pauley and Adrian Hardin, Evansville, Son, Dominic James, September 9
Melissa Winiger and Drake Beckner, Evansville, Daughter, Leora Ariel, September 10
Melissa Winiger and Drake Beckner, Evansville, Son, Delanie Apollo, September 10
Shaynah and Matthew Blevins, Hazleton, IN, Daughter, Kaynah Matyleigh Faith, September 10
Lauren and Levi Hoehn, Evansville, Daughter, Freya Dawn, September 10
Vanessa and Clint Rebstock, Evansville, Daughter, Josephine Faith, September 10
Emily Grannan and Dominik Major, Evansville, Daughter, Aaliyah Dominique, September 11
Amanda Stiles-Hardiman and Marc Collins, Evansville, Daughter, Olivia Jo, September 11
Tameka Harris and Lamarrio Fields, Evansville, Daughter, Shamera Nikkole, September 12
Kali Buchanan and Ray Martinez, Henderson, KY, Daughter, Lyndie Amor, September 15
Alyssia Johnson and Eric Weber, Grandview, IN, Son, Braydon Joseph Wayne, September 16
Katie and Nick Voegel, Evansville, Son, Maddox Lee, September 16
Chelsea and William Vallee, Evansville, Son, Sawyer Levi, September 16
Jessica and Tanner White, Evansville, Son, Elliott Mitchell, September 16
Chyna Tramill and Kyrique Presley I, Evansville, Son, Kyrique Avion II, September 17
Bethany Skelton and Dylan Slaton, Princeton, IN, Son, Jasper Wayne Everett, September 17
Kailee Rettinghaus, White Plains, KY, Daughter, Eliza Nevaeh, September 17
Melissa and Bryan Will, Wadesville, IN, Daughter, Katelyn Renae, September 17
Marika and Eric Marks, Evansville, Son, Trucker Dallas, September 17
Jessica Roy and Kalon Austin, Henderson, KY, Son, Everett Wynn, September 18
Allison and Jonathan Hodgson, Carmi, IL, Daughter, Noelle Lynn, September 18
Amie and William Darnold, Vincennes, IN, Daughter, Natalie Noelle, September 18
Bianca and Damian Chism, Mount Vernon, IN, Daughter, Ava Leigh, September 20
About St. Vincent
In Indiana, Ascension’s St. Vincent operates 24 hospitals in addition to a comprehensive network of affiliated joint ventures, medical practices and clinics serving central and southern Indiana and employs more than 15,000 associates. Across the state, St. Vincent provided more than $323 million in community benefit and care of persons living in poverty in fiscal year 2018. Serving Indiana for 145 years, Ascension is a faith-based healthcare organization committed to delivering compassionate, personalized care to all, with special attention to persons living in poverty and those most vulnerable. As one of the leading non-profit and Catholic health systems in the U.S, Ascension operates more than 2,600 sites of care – including 151 hospitals and more than 50 senior living facilities – in 21 states and the District of Columbia. Visit www.stvincent.or