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Negotiators propose three‑matrix approach and trainings to make teacher pay clearer

April 30, 2026 | Moscow School District, School Districts, Idaho


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Negotiators propose three‑matrix approach and trainings to make teacher pay clearer
Moscow — Teachers and district negotiators raised recurring confusion over the interaction of the district salary matrix and the state’s career‑ladder minimums, and agreed to produce clearer materials and training to reduce errors and frustration.

Union representatives said a majority of respondents do not understand the three‑tier state minimum system used in career‑ladder calculations, and that incorrect contracts have been issued in past years. The group discussed concrete options: the district proposed publishing three separate salary matrices (resident, professional and advanced professional) that show which cells are superseded by the state minimum and providing a public link to certification status so staff can determine which matrix applies to them.

The MEA also proposed member training: "The MEA organizes a training for all of their members explaining how salary is determined," said a committee participant urging education for staff. District staff outlined an alternative: keep a single matrix but use clearer visual cues (asterisks or gray shading) and add explanatory notes about when the state minimum replaces a cell.

Operational feasibility was a key concern. Administrators recommended investigating whether the district’s systems (Skyward and contract generation processes) can include career‑ladder placement on individual contracts or export it in the seniority list; adding such a field may require spreadsheet changes or extra data entry steps. The group assigned Jen, Sean and Rachel to draft a white paper that will recommend a preferred communication approach and identify technical constraints.

Next steps: the drafting team will return with matrix mockups and a feasibility assessment of adding career‑ladder placement to contracts and the seniority list. The team also recommended a MEA‑led training for members as a near‑term mitigation.

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