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Schools hire private staffing firm to find substitute teachers

Some administrators and union officials say only school personnel should find subs

Thu., August 12, 2004

Nationwide, 10 percent of some 2.75 million permanent teachers are absent on any given day for professional or personal reasons, according to Utah State University’s Substitute Teaching Institute. Finding competent substitute teachers to fill those absences has proved difficult for school administrators. Some schools are using temporary staffing firms to lighten their loads and find the best subs.

In December 2002 then-Gov. John Engler signed a bill permitting schools to use private staffing firms to find qualified substitute teachers, a job handled solely by the schools themselves before the law was passed.

Prior to enactment of the law, firms like Troy-based Kelly Services, a temporary employment firm, offered Michigan schools a limited menu of substitute staffing, amounting to scheduling and recruiting but not actual hiring of staff. After the law’s enactment, the company formed Kelly Educational Staffing, which is the first private-sector firm to provide substitute teachers nationwide.

In fact, the company’s reach is now international, including schools not just in the United States, but in the United Kingdom, yielding a grand total of 1,400 worldwide. Forty-one of the schools are in Michigan, located in Detroit, Inkster, Algonac, New Haven and Port Huron, according to company figures.

The 2002 substitute teacher bill required contracting companies to perform criminal background and certification checks on new hires. “Because our expertise is staffing, we can find and manage more eligible candidates than schools can alone,” Robert Doetsch, Public Relation manager for Kelly Educational Services, told MER. “We meet or exceed state employment requirements” for substitute teachers, he added.

Kelly does more than provide school districts with substitutes; it also pays the requisite payroll taxes and unemployment and worker’s compensation. It attempts to lure superior teachers by providing them with extras that substitutes do not usually receive, such as a 401(k) program, weekly pay with direct deposit, and access to health benefits. The company notes that its substitutes receive “the prevailing wage in the school or district” where they work.

In Kelly’s orientation program, its substitutes receive handbooks produced by the Substitute Teaching Institute at Utah State University. Doetsch claims that continual surveys of permanent teachers and administrators indicate a 99 percent satisfaction rating for the performance of Kelly substitute teachers.

Doetsch says Kelly’s substitute teachers receive greater benefit under the program as well, because they have more assurance of employment from Kelly’s large customer base. Substitutes may get to select where they work, and they are also eligible for non-teaching jobs during summer months or off periods, if they desire. Kelly says these features combine to attract more highly qualified substitute teachers for schools.

While the 2002 substitute teacher bill did not require schools to use outside firms, some school officials as well as school employee unions opposed the bill, and with it the ability of any school to use a firm. “We have good success with subs in our own system,” Susan Tinney of the Ingham Intermediate School District told the Lansing State Journal while the bill was under deliberation.

The state and national school employees’ unions remain at odds with contracting out for substitute teachers. When a bill similar to the one that passed was referred to the Michigan House Committee on Education in 2000, it garnered no votes. In a 2001 newsletter, the Michigan Education Association reported that “No action on [that] bill was taken by the House Committee on Education because of the telephone calls and e-mails from MEA members opposing the legislation.”

Schools that take referrals from Kelly must enter into a contract with the agency as well as pay an administrative fee for each substitute that Kelly locates for them. And schools may not always realize a direct dollar cost savings from the program, though it can free resources spent seeking and maintaining a ready pool of qualified substitutes. Kim Osborne, another spokesperson for Kelly, told the Detroit News that “Initially, it will cost the districts more. But in the long run, they will see savings.”

But Bill Foster, Assistant Superintendent of Algonac Community Schools, said that the cost of using Kelly Services to provide substitute teachers “has been a wash.” “But the rate that they have been able to fill substitute positions has been much higher than we were able to do it before. And it has allowed our personnel to concentrate on doing the job of educating children.”

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User Comments
Since 2009, the EFM was allocated $500.5 million in stimulus funds. They tore down a High School and built a multi-million dollar Cass Tech, the structure alone costing $94 million. $45 million was spent for a safety program. $41 million was used to purchase a reading series not needed, $50 million was used to buy all new computers for staff and students. $1.6 million was used for administrative travel and all leadership positions recieved significant raises. The EFM in the first year gave himself a $86,000 raise, including resources from philanthropist contributions, his salalry was somewhere beyond $450,000. This is a leadership who spent more to rent and eventually buy five floors of the Fisher Bldg for office space, paying more than the owner paid for the entire building one year earlier, adorned with rare and expensive artifacts.

Teachers have had pay freezes since 2001, they have had pay cuts, benefit cuts and an additional $500.00 has been deducted from their monothly pay for two years and counting.

Oh the money is in the schools alright, it just doesn't make it to the classroom. >>
except/accept??????? per pupil funding. If you're a teacher, I hope this was a typo. >>
Yes, I am agree with you. Educational equity argument can help, But also cause blowback credits are more popular than vouchers.

Thanks
_______
Daniel

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Yes, I am agree with you. Educational equity argument can help, But also cause blowback credits are more popular than vouchers.

Thanks
_______
Daniel

<a href=“http://www.legalx.net”>Find Attorney</a> >>
Your comment "No one is that poor that they cant provide a boloney sandwich..." was the definition of "out-of-touch". First, I agree whole-heartedly that parents matter. I would love to see parents drive or car pool kids to school. Even provide them with food, too. However, sadly it is unrealistic. The economy is so weak that everything is shrinking. If we eliminate transportation and food for students we may find many families electing not to send the child to school at all...then what?

Please respond! >>
This agreement has saved the districts money yet we are chastised for it despite the fact the wording at issue was known to be invalid and unenforceable by either side. I applaud our effort and believe this suit is frivolous. http://www.godfrey-lee.org/education/components/board/default.php?sectiondetailid=3458&threadid=554 >>
education is an all around development for a child
he should be mentally and physically strong


<a href="http://rescueyoursavings.com" rel="dofollow">Savings</a> >>
education is an all around development for a child
he should be mentally and physically strong >>
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Public servants like Presidents, Vice-Presidents, Senators, Congressmen, Judges, Secretaries of Various Departments and the like should be first to be compensated for performance.
The idea that the playing field for students is level everywhere is as Quixotic as thinking all politicians are honest and competent.
There are neighborhoods where only Portugese or gang sign language is spoken, where the parents both work two jobs to pay rent, where getting to school and back is more dangerous than Iraq and Afghanastan.
This Secretary of Education has to remove the silver spoon, roll up his sleeves and take his superior intellect attitude into the trenches and show the poor slobs that are taking their teachers jobs for granted how he would do it. Just because his mommy used to help out in Chicago doesn't give him the Congression Medal of Honor. Actually he's a stuffed shirt pretending to know it all.
How much do you want to bet that he wouldn't attempt entering these neighborhoods let alone these schools without security. >>