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Ankeny Approves Bonuses for Teachers Excluded From Reynolds’ Plan

The Ankeny School School Board approved on Monday evening allocating $131,333 to 122 certified staff members who will not receive a $1,000 bonus via Gov. Kim Reynoldsโ€™ teacher retention initiative. According to Ankeny’s latest annual progress report, the district has 863 certified teachers. In her Condition of the State address, Reynolds announced she was giving…

Screenshot from Ankeny Schools YouTube

The Ankeny School School Board approved on Monday evening allocating $131,333 to 122 certified staff members who will not receive a $1,000 bonus via Gov. Kim Reynoldsโ€™ teacher retention initiative.

According to Ankeny’s latest annual progress report, the district has 863 certified teachers.

In her Condition of the State address, Reynolds announced she was giving teachers who stayed on through the pandemic and will continue teaching next year a $1,000 bonus using federal Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief Fund (ESSER) funds.

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The disbursement of the funds is being handled by the Iowa Department of Education. The bonuses are for โ€œqualifying teachers at public schools, accredited nonpublic schools, independently accredited nonpublic schools, and state-operated schools.โ€

Qualifying teachers are educators who started by Oct. 1, 2021, and whose contract does not expire until June 30, 2022. Additionally, the teacher cannot have taught virtually during this period; the bonus only goes to teachers who taught full-time and in-person.

However, if a teacher was placed on administrative leave and they are reinstated by June 30, they are still eligible to receive a bonus.

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While Ankeny will provide a $1,000 bonus to its certified staff who werenโ€™t eligible to receive a bonus from Reynoldsโ€”about 14% of district teachersโ€”some non-certified staff told Ankeny school officials they felt left out.

โ€œThose emails were hard to read,โ€ said Ankeny school board member Amy Tagliareni. โ€œWhen it said, โ€˜Iโ€™ve been let down by the governor and now Iโ€™m going to be let down by my school,โ€™ theyโ€™re not wrong, unfortunately.

โ€œAnd, so, anything we can examine to see if we can make something workโ€”within reasonโ€”I would just try to encourage us to do that. Even if itโ€™s not right now, even if itโ€™s something moving forward, we can try to figure out something.โ€

 

UPDATE (March 8, 2023, 7:30 a.m.): This story has been updated with the correct source of a quote from the board meeting.

 

by Ty Rushing
03/07/22

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  • Ty Rushing is the former Chief Political Correspondent for Iowa Starting Line. He is a trail-blazing veteran Iowa journalist, an Emmy-nominated filmmaker, and co-founder and president of the Iowa Association of Black Journalists.