Other views

By Staff
Reform bill not a solution
Editor:
The Alabama Legislature is very close to passing a bill to "reform" teacher tenure that will actually make it harder to fire school employees who aren't doing their jobs. The lawmakers have resurrected the Amendment 1 version of tenure reform, which is based on a fundamental misunderstanding of the problems with the current law.
Currently, teachers appeal to their firing to the Alabama Tenure Commission. Despite popular opinion, however, the commission is not the problem. It upholds teachers' firings more than 70 percent of the time.
All the Amendment 1 bills really do is disband the commission and have teachers appeal their firing to an arbiter. The bills keep fired teachers on the payroll up to 112 days longer than current law, give more power to an arbiter (accountable to no one) than the local school board, and fail to address the real roadblocks to dismissing bad employees.
The primary problems with the current tenure law are the difficulty in building the case against the teacher and the ambiguities about what constitutes "poor performance." Nothing in the Amendment 1 bills addresses those, but the governor's new plan (Senate bills 307 and 308) would.
His new bills streamline the hearing process; give specific examples of things that would be firing offenses; clarify that the "case" against the teacher can include prior years' offenses; allow as evidence things like emails that are not in the teacher's formal personnel file; and create a workable process for suspending school employees without pay as a discipline measure.
Almost all school board members and school board attorneys, the people who must make the law work, oppose the Amendment 1 tenure bills, but they support the governor's new plan.
Please join me in urging our local legislators to oppose the bad bills and support Senate bills 307 and 308.
Jimmy Dobbs
Board member, Morgan County Board of Education

Editor's picks

Heartbreaking finish: Hartselle comes up a run short in state baseball finals

Decatur

Fallen Morgan County officers remembered, families honored  

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Hartselle drops Game 1 to Hillcrest, needs two wins for state title

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Despite title loss, Hartselle thankful for state experience 

Editor's picks

Hartselle baseball legend dies

Breaking News

Hartselle baseball legend William Booth dies at 79

At a Glance

ALDOT patching area of Thompson Road tomorrow, Thursday

At a Glance

Spring-time market day in Hartselle scheduled for May 18 

Hartselle

New Crestline Elementary School welcomes students

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Hartselle industry closing, affecting more than 150 jobs  

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Habitat for Humanity applications for homeownership available June 3 

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

State seeking death penalty for Fort Payne woman accused of pushing victim off cliff

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Pilot of ultralight dies in Hartselle plane crash

Editor's picks

Northern lights visible from north Alabama

Hartselle

Hartselle students to attend Boys State

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

High scorers: 42 Hartselle students a part of ACT 30 plus club

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Hartselle projects budget surplus based on midyear numbers 

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Planned Hartselle library already piquing interest 

Brewer

Students use practical life skills at Morgan County 4-H competition

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

After 13 years underground, the cicadas are coming 

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Hartselle students collect pop tabs for Ronald McDonald House

MULTIMEDIA-FRONT PAGE

Priceville students design art for SRO’s police car 

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Hartselle Junior Thespians excel at state festival 

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

$15k raised for community task force at annual banquet  

x