cost of living – 社区黑料 America's Education News Source Thu, 08 May 2025 16:56:19 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 /wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-74_favicon-32x32.png cost of living – 社区黑料 32 32 Progress Report: Hawai驶i鈥檚 Working Families Need More Support /article/progress-report-hawai%ca%bbis-working-families-need-more-support/ Fri, 09 May 2025 16:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=1014991 This article was originally published in

Sarah Osofsky returned to school last year to earn her master鈥檚 degree in social work, hoping to give back to her community and find a job that would pay enough to survive Hawai驶i鈥檚 high cost of living.

Now, less than two weeks away from graduation, the mother of two is struggling to find a position that can sustain her family.

Most social work jobs she鈥檚 seen in recent months offer salaries of $60,000 or less 鈥 enough to disqualify her from safety net programs like food stamps, but not enough to comfortably provide for her kids. She鈥檚 considered moving back to California where she has family who could support her, but she wants to stay in Hawai驶i so her children can be near their dad.


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鈥淲hat I鈥檓 balancing right now is, do I take a low, low paying job that then I鈥檒l qualify for services like food stamps and Medicaid,鈥 Osofsky said, 鈥渙r do I hold out and try to find those few and far between really good jobs that will make enough so I don鈥檛 qualify but I don鈥檛 need it.鈥

Osofsky鈥檚 struggle is a familiar one for working families in Hawai驶i. In 2024, nearly 30% of Hawai驶i households were living paycheck-to-paycheck and struggling to afford basic necessities like housing, child care and food, according to an annual count of the state鈥檚 ALICE families 鈥 an acronym for people who are asset limited, income constrained, and employed.

Like Osofsky, roughly 40% of these families considered leaving the state over the past year, according to a study from Aloha United Way.

While some reports indicate that more locals have been returning to Hawai驶i in the last few years, the state鈥檚 high cost of living continues to drive some families away, straining the public education system and economy.

Earlier this year, the Department of Education said its kindergarten enrollment dropped from 13,000 in 2019 to nearly 10,800 this year, citing estimates that 20% of people leaving Hawai驶i are school-aged kids. The department is now starting the process of consolidating small schools, although it hasn鈥檛 yet identified which campuses are at risk of closure.

A few years ago, state lawmakers grappling with the Covid-19 pandemic proposed a bold slate of reforms to improve the plight of working families: free school meals for all, universal access to preschool and paid family leave. But the state鈥檚 big plans for progress have resulted in incremental steps, and some families and advocates say change isn鈥檛 happening quickly enough.

Lawmakers this session created a working group to study paid family leave but failed to turn the yearslong proposal into law. The state expanded eligibility for preschool tuition subsidies and funded preschool construction but failed to address the ongoing shortage of early learning educators. And Senate Bill 1300 鈥 considered one of the biggest wins for students this year 鈥 expanded access to free school meals but stopped short of providing them for all kids.

At the same time, uncertainty looms around the future of programs that rely on federal dollars to support working families, including school meals and early learning centers.

Amid the upheaval, state lawmakers were hesitant to pass big spending measures this year, opting instead to set aside $200 million to help Hawai驶i prepare for federal funding cuts. But some advocates say now is exactly the time for the state to make a bigger investment in families.

鈥淭he state Legislature, and frankly, the counties, should be thinking, 鈥楤ad stuff is coming,鈥欌 said Deborah Zysman, executive director of Hawai驶i Children鈥檚 Action Network. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 quite know what yet, but we should be thinking about how to take care of our own people.鈥

An Urgent Need For Child Care

During the Covid-19 pandemic, Osofsky worried about the social development of her son, who was just turning 2 when lockdown restrictions began. But when he began attending the University of Hawai驶i M膩noa Children鈥檚 Center later that year, Osofsky said, he received services for his speech delay and became comfortable making friends and recognizing letters.

But paying for preschool was a challenge, Osofsky said. The Preschool Open Doors program provides a state subsidy to help cover tuition, but her son was ineligible when he started because the program only covered 4-year-olds at the time. The program expanded to include 3-year-olds last year.

Hawai驶i has pledged to offer preschool to all 3- and 4-year-olds by 2032. The Ready Keiki initiative, led by Lt. Gov. Sylvia Luke, currently estimates the state needs to add more than 330 classrooms in the next seven years to provide preschool to an additional 6,700 children.

While lawmakers successfully expanded access to tuition subsidies and funded more preschool construction this year, progress toward the state鈥檚 ambitious goal has slowed on other fronts.

One successful bill this session expands eligibility for preschool subsidies by including 2-year-olds and repealing the requirement that families must use the subsidy at a nationally accredited provider, which has created financial and administrative barriers for smaller programs in the past, Zysman said.

But the Department of Human Services is on track to spend only $20 million of its $50 million budget for preschool subsidies this year, said Scott Morishige, administrator of the department鈥檚 Benefit, Employment and Support Services Division.

To ramp up its spending, DHS is considering expanding the income eligibility to 500% of the federal poverty line. If DHS adopts the rules this summer, Morishige said, a family of four could make up to $184,000 annually and still be eligible for assistance, compared to the past income limit of $110,000.

The state budget sets aside $20 million to build more public preschool classrooms over the next three years. The state plans on opening 25 public preschool classrooms this fall and an additional 25 classrooms the following year, far less than previous estimates that Hawai驶i could build 40-50 classrooms annually.

While the state would like to take a more aggressive approach to opening public preschool classrooms moving forward, Luke said, the Ready Keiki initiative is also relying on private providers and charter schools to help expand access. The state is starting larger construction projects, like standalone preschool centers, that could add seats more rapidly as they open in the next few years.

鈥淭here is an urgency for us to open as many preschool seats as we can,鈥 she said.

But families鈥 demand for preschool could grow beyond what the state has anticipated if the federal government stops funding its own child care programs. Head Start, which relies on federal funding and serves roughly 2,800 children and pregnant mothers, is currently Hawai驶i鈥檚 largest provider of early learning services, said Ryan Kusumoto, president and CEO of the nonprofit Parents And Children Together.

The Trump administration has previously threatened to cut funding entirely for Head Start, although the most recent version of the federal budget keeps program funding intact. Some Hawai驶i Head Start programs are still waiting to receive confirmation for next year鈥檚 funding, and the recent closure of some regional offices could create backlogs in awarding this money, said Ben Naki, president of the Head Start Association of Hawai驶i.

鈥淭here鈥檚 no existing infrastructure that can pick up those 2,800 kids,鈥 Kusumoto said. 鈥淎nd we鈥檙e talking about kids who don鈥檛 have any other resources.鈥

First Steps For Free Meals

Since September, Christine Russo said paying for meals has become a greater challenge for her family as her twins joined her 10-year-old in attending school every day. She sets aside roughly $180 each month so her kids can purchase breakfast and lunch at school 鈥 a challenge for the public school teacher, whose husband is a retail store manager.

Russo鈥檚 kids don鈥檛 qualify for free or reduced-price school meals, but she said her family could still benefit from the ongoing push to bring back a pandemic-era program that made meals free for all students.

Lawmakers stopped short of funding a universal free meals program this year but took incremental steps by passing Senate Bill 1300. Starting next year, the state will provide free school meals to students who currently qualify for reduced-price lunch. The following year, eligibility for free school meals would be expanded to families making up to 300% of the federal poverty level, or roughly $110,000 for a family of four.

The bill appropriates $565,000 to provide more free school meals next year and an additional $3.4 million for the program鈥檚 expansion the following year. More than 68,000 students in the Department of Education qualified for free meals this year, and 10,000 qualified for reduced-price meals.

The bill also requires schools feed students who don鈥檛 have enough money to purchase lunch or already have meal debt. Students have accrued more than $105,000 in meal debt this school year, DOE communications director Nanea Ching said.

At Castle High School, junior Tayli Kahoopii said she receives free meals, but some of her friends don鈥檛 qualify. When someone doesn鈥檛 have enough money in their account to purchase lunch, the register makes a buzzing sound 鈥 loud enough to embarrass students and, in one instance, deter Kahoopii鈥檚 friend from trying to purchase meals for a week.

鈥淥n a daily basis, you see kids getting their food taken away, and there鈥檚 really nothing that they can do about it,鈥 Kahoopii said, adding that it鈥檚 difficult for students to learn and focus when they don鈥檛 have access to food during the school day.

Rep. Scot Matayoshi, who has introduced bills for the past three years proposing free school meals, said SB1300 is an important step. But he still plans on advocating for universal free school meals in the coming years, especially since it would reduce the administrative barriers schools and families face in determining who qualifies for free meals.

Daniela Spoto, director of food equity at Hawai驶i Appleseed, said providing all students with free school meals could also become more important with federal funding on the line. Proposed federal cuts to a program allowing schools in low-income areas to provide free meals to all children could impact 52 schools and more than 27,000 kids in Hawai驶i, according to estimates from the Food Research and Action Center.

鈥淚t should be a staple for our schools to have free school lunch,鈥 said Castle junior Hali驶a Tom-Jardine, who will begin qualifying for free school meals next year. 鈥淚t should be a right.鈥

鈥楤ad Things Are Coming鈥

During the pandemic, people saw lawmakers step up and meet the needs of working families through federal initiatives like the child tax credit and free school meals, said Kayla Keehu-Alexander, vice president of community impact at Aloha United Way. Now, she said, state lawmakers need to do the same during times of uncertainty.

鈥淚f we don鈥檛 start making some big policy changes around the cost of living, around housing, we could potentially be looking at a larger out-migration than we鈥檝e had in the past,鈥 she said.

Hawai驶i is already starting to see the possible impacts of out-migration on its schools and economy. While some people are coming back to Hawai驶i to raise families, Keehu-Alexander said, it鈥檚 unclear if they鈥檙e joining the workforce in areas with the worst staffing shortages, like education or healthcare.

Looking ahead to next year, Zysman said she would like to see a successful bill establishing paid family leave in Hawai驶i, which would provide caregivers paid time off to care for their loved ones. Lawmakers have failed to pass a bill for several years, although they did approve a resolution last month establishing a working group that will study how to implement paid family leave over the next year.

Zysman added that she鈥檚 concerned about the long-term impacts of the historic tax cut lawmakers passed last year. While she supports cuts that can make it more affordable for people to stay in Hawai驶i, she said, she鈥檚 worried that tax breaks for the wealthiest will make it harder for the state to fund programs that can keep working families afloat.

鈥淚n my gut, I feel like bad things are coming,鈥 Zysman said, 鈥渁nd we should have acted more preemptively.鈥

This was originally published on . Civil Beat鈥檚 education reporting is supported by a grant from Chamberlin Family Philanthropy.

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鈥榃e鈥檙e Drowning鈥: Teacher Pay vs. Cost of Living Approaches Crisis Level in WV鈥檚 Eastern Panhandle /article/were-drowning-teacher-pay-vs-cost-of-living-approaches-crisis-level-in-wvs-eastern-panhandle/ Tue, 11 Mar 2025 16:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=1011324 This article was originally published in

The phrase 鈥渟ay the hard part out loud鈥 has had a moment in the national spotlight recently. And within West Virginia, you鈥檒l hear it repeatedly when you talk to education professionals in the Eastern Panhandle about teacher pay.

Something else you鈥檒l hear with regularity is the word 鈥渃risis.鈥

Michelle Barnhart, a social studies teacher at Martinsburg鈥檚 South Middle School in Berkeley County, has seen the teacher shortage turn from a growing problem into something much more serious.


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鈥淲hen I started teaching in 2017, you had to be actively working on your degree to even be considered for a position. Now, they鈥檙e putting people with associate degrees 鈥 or no degree at all 鈥 into classrooms as full-time teachers,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey aren鈥檛 supposed to, but they have no choice.鈥

The state, added Barnhart, is ignoring the problem.

鈥淐harleston doesn鈥檛 see it, or chooses not to. People downstate don鈥檛 understand that many of the adults in these kids鈥 classrooms up here aren鈥檛 actually teachers 鈥 because the teachers have gone elsewhere for better pay.鈥

Imagine, she said, if hospitals started hiring people with no medical background to be doctors. 鈥淛ust pulling people off the street, handing them a clipboard, and saying, 鈥楬ere, practice medicine.鈥 That鈥檚 what鈥檚 happening here in education.鈥

Barnhart said that many of her colleagues and fellow educators feel powerless at the end of the day.

鈥淭he cost of living in the panhandle is nowhere near the rest of West Virginia, but teachers, state workers 鈥 anyone whose salary is coded into law 鈥 get the same base pay. If you live elsewhere, that鈥檚 not a big deal. But if you move here, you suddenly realize this is a crisis.鈥

Parents, she said, are often unaware of just how bad the situation has become.

鈥淭hey鈥檒l see the bus driver shortage on the news and get outraged about routes being cut. But they don鈥檛 know what鈥檚 happening inside the classrooms. They don鈥檛 see how many positions go unfilled all year, or how often classes are just split up when a teacher calls out 鈥 overcrowding the ones that are already at their limit.鈥

Even for those who stay, Barnhart said, burnout is inevitable.

鈥淵ou have algebra teachers covering trigonometry. English teachers covering history. Some days, they still can鈥檛 find someone to cover,鈥 she said. 鈥淲hen that happens, learning just stops.鈥

Andrew Fincham, a health and physical education teacher at Martinsburg High School in Berkeley County, has seen the pattern repeat itself year after year.

鈥淚t鈥檚 only getting worse,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd with the population growth in the panhandle, we鈥檙e running out of room. Classrooms are overflowing, and we鈥檙e sticking kids in trailers to make it work 鈥 but the turnover rate with teachers is staggering.鈥

Currently, Berkeley County鈥檚 student population alone 鈥 聽鈥 exceeds the of 26 entire counties in West Virginia. As of the start of the current school year in August 2024, Berkeley County had permanent substitutes hired.

鈥淲e鈥檙e losing an alarming number of teachers every year throughout the county 鈥 whether it鈥檚 retirement or leaving for more money,鈥 Fincham said. 鈥淎nd the impact on students is undeniable 鈥 all schools, all grade levels.鈥

Fincham doesn鈥檛 see the 鈥渞evolving door鈥 getting any better without major policy changes.

鈥淎ll the nearby states 鈥 Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania 鈥 adjust salaries based on cost of living. West Virginia doesn鈥檛. It鈥檚 easy to see where this is headed. If the state doesn鈥檛 start thinking about this in a new way, in five years, it鈥檒l be catastrophic.鈥

The impact on retention, added Barnhart, can鈥檛 be overstated.

鈥淏erkeley and Jefferson counties, especially, have become steppingstones. Teachers come here, get a few years of experience, and then leave for better pay 鈥 often nearby.鈥

For Barnhart, the predicament is both personal and professional. 鈥淚 have kids in this school system; I see it as a parent and as an educator,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 frustrating because I don鈥檛 want to leave, but at some point, I might not have a choice.鈥

Considering almost all those choices are within 30 minutes or less, Barnhart admitted it鈥檚 hard to ignore the disparity.

鈥淚f I left for Frederick County Schools [Virginia], I鈥檇 make over $6,400 more per year,鈥 she said. 鈥淚n Washington County [Maryland], over $11,500 more. And Loudoun County [Northern Virginia], almost $25,000 more.鈥

The numbers don鈥檛 lie

At the end of the day, however, this isn鈥檛 a new conversation for people like Barnhart, Fincham, and thousands of others within the region. In recent decades, West Virginia鈥檚 education landscape has been punctuated by significant teacher strikes, notably in and 2018 鈥 both primarily driven by concerns over inadequate compensation and escalating health care costs.

The , in particular, saw approximately 20,000 educators and school personnel shutting down schools across all 55 counties, culminating in a 5% pay raise for all state workers.

And yet, in 2025 鈥 as in most years previous 鈥 West Virginia sits either nationally or perilously close to dead last on just about any average teacher salary list you come across 鈥 jostling for position between Florida, South Dakota and Missouri year after year. Be that as it may, according to the most recent data available from the National Education Association, the estimated national average annual salary for teachers 鈥 while West Virginia shuffles in at .

That said, the Eastern Panhandle鈥檚 three core counties 鈥 Berkeley, Jefferson and Morgan 鈥 are the fastest-growing in the state, and closest to the Washington, D.C., metropolitan area, making them highly susceptible to issues like cost-of-living disparities and teacher-pay inequities.

According to the most recent data from the West Virginia Department of Education, the in Berkeley County lands at $55,412; the average for Jefferson County comes in at $54,153; and Morgan County sits at $55,624.

Compare that to West Virginia鈥檚 poorest county, McDowell, where the average teacher salary is . However, the average home value in McDowell County hovers with the median home sale price standing at approximately $41,000. Accordingly, almost all cost-of-living data is lower or significantly lower in . To that end, $53,296 goes a long way there, as it does in numerous other counties in West Virginia that boast similar cost-of-living data.

By contrast, average home values in Berkeley County climb into the . In Jefferson County, it鈥檚 even higher, with values . In Morgan County, values can . The cost of living within these three counties is commensurate with those values. But the average teacher salary within the Eastern Panhandle comes in at $55,063 鈥 not even $2,000 more annually than West Virginia鈥檚 poorest county.

Talk to anyone close to this issue, and they will tell you in no uncertain terms 鈥 it鈥檚 becoming all but impossible to work as a teacher or education service worker in the Eastern Panhandle and pay the bills. And when extra money does arrive, it鈥檚 in the form of a statewide raise 鈥 without consideration for locality pay 鈥 which keeps that allotment relatively small in proportion to the ever-widening economic gap between the Eastern Panhandle and the rest of the state.

Bargaining power

鈥淚t鈥檚 economics 101,鈥 said John Deskins, director of West Virginia University鈥檚 Bureau of Business and Economic Research. 鈥淚f salaries remain the same across the state, schools in more competitive job markets like the Eastern Panhandle will struggle to attract and retain teachers. It鈥檚 a matter of supply and demand 鈥 higher costs and a stronger labor market require higher pay.鈥

Berkeley County Schools Superintendent Ryan Saxe, formerly superintendent in Cabell County, echoed the sentiment 鈥 and admitted to not fully grasping the depth of the problem until taking his current job.

鈥淚n my previous county, we competed with Ohio and Kentucky for teachers, but the disparity wasn鈥檛 nearly as severe as what we see here with Maryland and Virginia,鈥 he said.

Saxe doesn鈥檛 believe West Virginia needs to match those salaries dollar for dollar, 鈥溾 but we must close the gap,鈥 he said. 鈥淩ight now, we have around 200 permanent substitute positions because we can鈥檛 fill them with certified staff. That depletes our substitute pool and leaves us constantly reposting vacancies for high-need areas.鈥

Sen. Patricia Rucker, R-Jefferson, believes part of the issue is Charleston鈥檚 reluctance to even acknowledge cost-of-living disparities.

鈥淭he federal government has already done the research to determine appropriate salary increases for employees based on regional economic conditions,鈥 she said. 鈥淎 similar approach for public employees in high-cost areas in our state makes sense.鈥

But the push for locality pay has failed repeatedly, she said, primarily due to opposition from lawmakers outside the Eastern Panhandle.

鈥淭he Senate has passed similar measures three times, only for them to fail in the House,鈥 Rucker said, 鈥淭he last time, we were 14 votes short. That鈥檚 a big gap.鈥

The resistance comes from a long-standing belief in uniform pay across all 55 counties, said Dale Lee, president of the West Virginia Education Association.

鈥淏ut that resistance mindset ignores an economic reality,鈥 Lee said. 鈥淎 few years ago, an attempt to secure locality pay for state police was soundly defeated. The challenge is that while it would benefit a few counties, the majority wouldn鈥檛 see any advantage 鈥 so their delegates aren鈥檛 inclined to support it.鈥

Instead of direct locality pay, some legislators are exploring alternatives, like reducing the 鈥渓ocal share,鈥 which would allow high-growth counties to keep more of their tax revenue to fund education salaries.

鈥淚f that money is earmarked for salaries and benefits, it could be a real solution,鈥 Lee said.

As Lee indicated, the shortage isn鈥檛 limited to teachers 鈥 state police, social workers and other public employees face the same problem in high-cost areas.

Former West Virginia delegate John Doyle has been advocating for locality pay for over 30 years, first proposing a housing allowance in the early 2000s as a way to soften opposition.

鈥淭he state would provide a housing allowance based on cost-of-living data,鈥 he said. 鈥淓very county would be ranked from 1 to 55, with the median county serving as the baseline. Any county ranked above the median would receive some level of housing allowance 鈥 smaller for those just above, larger for the highest-cost counties.鈥

He recalled that when cost-of-living data was first released to legislators, some were stunned by the housing prices in the Eastern Panhandle. 鈥淭hey assumed we all lived in large homes. I had to explain that I lived in a 1,000-square-foot FHA rancher, and it was worth almost double the state average.鈥

Doyle also warned against the idea that raising salaries in border counties would simply cause a ripple effect of teacher migration.

鈥淪alaries don鈥檛 need to match Maryland and Virginia 鈥 just get close enough. If the gap is $20,000, they鈥檒l leave. If it鈥檚 $10,000 or less, they might stay.鈥

But the state has spent decades failing to act. Doyle pointed out that in 1990, West Virginia was ranked 26th in teacher pay after a major statewide raise under former Gov. Gaston Caperton. By the late 1990s, Maryland and Virginia had surged past it once again.

鈥淓very few years, the issue reaches a boiling point, like the 2018 teacher strike, which resulted in a 5% statewide raise 鈥 but failed to address the Eastern Panhandle鈥檚 unique economic challenges,鈥 he underscored.

With legislative momentum reliably sluggish, greater political action might be required, said Rucker 鈥 who also chairs the Government Organization Committee.

鈥淚f we don鈥檛 have enough qualified teachers, we are failing to meet our constitutional obligation to provide an efficient education system. A class action lawsuit could force the state鈥檚 hand,鈥 she said.

On the economic side, Deskins sees another consequence of inaction: economic decline.

鈥淚f schools decline due to this crisis, the region becomes far less appealing. People don鈥檛 want to move to areas with struggling schools, which would ultimately slow economic growth,鈥 Deskins said.

Essentially, explained Deskins, West Virginia鈥檚 fastest-growing region 鈥 the only part of the state successfully attracting new residents 鈥 is being left to fend for itself.

鈥淔rom a broad economic-development perspective, we鈥檙e making one of the state鈥檚 most promising regions less attractive 鈥 ultimately working against ourselves,鈥 Deskins said.

The political fight will only continue, and will hopefully play a prominent role in the current legislative session, said Doyle 鈥 who believes the Eastern Panhandle finally has strength in numbers.

鈥淭he Eastern Panhandle now has more than 10% of the legislature,鈥 Doyle said. 鈥淭hat gives our delegation real bargaining power. If they unify and make this a non-negotiable priority, they can trade support on other bills to get it passed.鈥

Rucker agreed.

鈥淭he delegates from this region have better strength in numbers, and are working hard to educate their colleagues and emphasize that this benefits the entire state, not just the Panhandle,鈥 she said.

Nonetheless, Lee remains skeptical.

鈥淚n my experience, when the legislature makes something a priority, they find the money for it,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f this becomes a priority, a solution will follow. But that remains to be seen.鈥

Doyle, however, was more blunt: 鈥淎t the heart of it all is the fact that the state doesn鈥檛 want to give money to teachers because they want to be able to give a giant tax break to corporations.鈥

Repeated requests for comment from State Superintendent of Schools Michele Blatt went unanswered.

The cost of inaction

Imagine a moment in the near future in the Eastern Panhandle 鈥 likely Berkeley or Jefferson Counties 鈥 when a brand-new high school opens with all the pomp and circumstance that comes with such occasions. And on day one, as the doors open and the students pour through them en route to homeroom and the new year ahead, not a single certified teacher is there to greet them. Rather, every room, and every subject, is being covered by a substitute.

Sounds crazy? Many education professionals in the Eastern Panhandle are calling it something else: inevitable.

鈥淚 can easily see that happening 鈥 we鈥檙e drowning,鈥 said Jana Woofter, a chemistry and physical science teacher at Spring Mills High School in Martinsburg. Woofter also serves as president of the Berkeley County Education Association.

鈥淏ills are often triple what they are in other parts of the state,鈥 she said. 鈥淗ousing costs are through the roof. Berkeley County tries to help with a housing allowance, but Jefferson and Morgan counties don鈥檛 have those same benefits. Even with the assistance, my members are struggling 鈥 especially with PEIA [West Virginia鈥檚 Public Employees Insurance Agency] .鈥

The struggle isn鈥檛 just with the state. Clay Anders, a physical education teacher at C.W. Shipley Elementary in Jefferson County鈥檚 Harpers Ferry, is frustrated that even as property values have doubled, teachers haven鈥檛 seen a county-based raise in over a decade.

鈥淭he local levy passed again, and there鈥檚 millions in additional revenue coming in 鈥斅燽ut none of it has gone to us in quite a while,鈥 he said. 鈥淢eanwhile, the board office has added new positions and given themselves raises every year.鈥

As of Nov. 6, 2024, the passed with ease 鈥 totaling $25,427,656. According to Jefferson County Schools, the bulk of the levy 鈥 $19,376,035 鈥 will go to 鈥渟alary assistance for teachers and service personnel.鈥

At the same time, Anders pointed out, extra-pay options that once existed for Jefferson County educators have disappeared.

鈥淭he county cut a program that allowed teachers to earn up to 3,000 extra dollars per year. That was real money that made a difference. But then they phased it down to $1,500, and now it鈥檚 gone completely.鈥

The level of participation in that program told him everything he needed to know.

鈥淣early 98% of eligible teachers took part in it,鈥 Anders said. 鈥淭hat should tell you how much we need the money.鈥

He believes that if the county won鈥檛 act, teachers may have to take matters into their own hands.

鈥淢aryland and Virginia have county-based unions that fight for local pay,鈥 Anders said. 鈥淲est Virginia doesn鈥檛. We only have state-level unions, and they aren鈥檛 fighting county battles.鈥

Additionally, Anders and a group of teachers are preparing a Freedom of Information Act request to uncover exactly where the money is going.

鈥淭he board claims there鈥檚 no money for teacher raises, yet they鈥檙e increasing salaries at the top. If every million dollars in new revenue could mean an $800 to $900 raise per teacher, then where is that money going?鈥

The answer, at least in Berkeley County, according to Board of Education member Damon Wright, is complicated.

鈥淢ost of our budget already goes to salaries,鈥 Wright said. 鈥淎nd we鈥檝e denied requests for new administrative positions to keep costs down. But we continue to have growth needs 鈥 especially when it comes to mental health services for students, which require more funding.

鈥淭hat said, every time we dip into reserves, we run the risk of the state stepping in and questioning our financial management. We鈥檝e increased the housing allowance, and we鈥檒l keep looking for ways to supplement pay, but we can鈥檛 solve this alone.鈥

The challenges only get more complex, he said, when Charleston refuses to act.

鈥淭he state doesn鈥檛 believe in cost-of-living adjustments. They think if we raise salaries in high-cost areas like the panhandle, teachers from rural counties will flood the region. But that鈥檚 not realistic. Most teachers in McDowell and similar counties are among the highest-paid professionals in their communities. Here, teachers need roommates just to afford rent.鈥

Michelle Pereschuk, a special education teacher at South Middle School, called the system broken and confessed that teachers are running out of reasons to stay 鈥 including herself.

鈥淚鈥檝e been at the tipping point for years,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 was born and raised in Berkeley County. My kids are in the school system. I want to stay 鈥 but I can鈥檛 afford it much longer.鈥

Like many in the county, Pereschuk鈥檚 mortgage swallows her paycheck. She once considered a position in nearby Washington County, Maryland, that would have paid her $11,000 more in the first year and up to $17,000 more over time. She ultimately stayed due to personal reasons, but the pull to leave grows stronger every day.

鈥淲inchester City Schools and Frederick County, [both in Virginia], are 20 minutes from my house. Maryland and Virginia also allow out-of-state teachers to send their kids to school there. For the first three years, you pay a small tuition fee, then your kids attend for free. If I move, I could take my youngest with me and give him a better-funded education while making a lot more money.鈥

Such decisions aren鈥檛 just being measured in Pereschuk鈥檚 household, she assured, but rather, in many homes across the region.

鈥淥ff the top of my head, I can name at least 10 people in my school alone who are seriously considering leaving,鈥 she said.

Woofter, who works multiple jobs to make ends meet, added that, even for those who choose to stay, survival requires sacrifices.

鈥淚 run the science fair for my school and the county, coordinate academic competitions, tutor, sell tickets at events 鈥 anything to make extra money. If I moved across the border, I wouldn鈥檛 have to do all that. But I stay because I love it here.鈥

As for rising insurance costs, Wright said, whatever raises the state offers at this point are quickly wiped out by PEIA increases.

鈥淭he misconception is that a raise actually means more money,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛. When insurance premiums jump 40%, and co-pays triple, as they鈥檙e set to do, it鈥檚 actually a pay cut. Later this summer, when those PEIA increases hit, I think we鈥檒l see a mass exodus 鈥 not just teachers, but public employees across the board.鈥

Without action, warned Woofter, the situation will only deteriorate. She鈥檚 already seeing it play out at her own school.

鈥淪pring Mills High School opened in 2013. In just over a decade, fewer than 20 original staff members remain. That kind of turnover is devastating.鈥

Moreover, Wright said, Charleston鈥檚 inaction is feeding into another, larger movement 鈥 the privatization of education.

鈥淩ather than addressing the crisis in public schools, the state is using the decline as an excuse to push private schools, charter schools and voucher programs,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he problem is, 25% of Berkeley County鈥檚 students have special needs, and public schools are required to serve them 鈥 private schools are not.鈥

West Virginia doesn鈥檛 fully fund those services so counties cover the gap.

鈥淚f lawmakers shift funding away from public schools to private options, that burden grows,鈥 Wright said. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e letting the system fail so they can justify alternatives.鈥

At the end of the day, he said the community is the last line of defense.

鈥淲e鈥檙e already in crisis mode 鈥 whether the state chooses to address it or not. The public needs to understand just how bad this is getting. And the only way any of this changes is if the public demands it 鈥 loudly. If people in the panhandle make enough noise, Charleston can鈥檛 ignore it forever.鈥

is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. West Virginia Watch maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Leann Ray for questions: info@westvirginiawatch.com.

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