NEA - National Education Association

04/30/2024 | News release | Distributed by Public on 04/30/2024 04:58

‘We Must Do Better’: School Support Staff Still Earn Below Living Wage

Just how out-of-reach a livable wage is for many of the 3 million support professionals who work in public education (K-12 and higher education) is highlighted in the just-released 2024 NEA Education Support Professionals Earnings report.

According to the report, 33 percent of all ESPs working full‐time earn less than $25,000 per year, and 11 percent earn less than $15,000. Among those working in K-12 schools, 38 percent earn less than $25,000, and 12.5 percent earn less than $15,000. Within higher education, 14.0 percent earn less than $25,000, and 6.4 percent earn less than $15,000.

Among ESPs who work full-time in K-12 schools, the average salary in 2022-23 was $33,756. Overall, the average earning (including ESPS in higher education) was $35,995, an increase of almost $4,800 since 2014. But factoring in inflation, that amount drops to $28,149 in 2014 dollars.

Nelly Henjes in Pinellas County, Florida says inflation has made her district unaffordable for too many support professionals. A child development assistant and president of the Pinellas County Educational Support Professionals Association, Henjes says many ESPs simply cannot afford to live anywhere close to where they work.

"You can't when you make somewhere in between $22,000 and $25,000, not with the cost-of-living increasing as it has over the past few years," Henjes says.

The Kenai Peninsula Borough School District in Alaska, says Susanna Litwiniak, head secretary at Moose Pass School and president of the Kenai Peninsula Education Support Association, is constantly scrambling to fill vacant positions due to low pay.

"We've had schools that have gone without custodians for months at a time," Litwiniak recently told NEA Today. "And you've got teachers filling in, secretaries filling in. Staff have helped in the lunchroom because there aren't enough food service workers."