Citizen Portal
Sign In

Get AI Briefings, Transcripts & Alerts on Local & National Government Meetings — Forever.

Sparta Area School District board approves 2.63% pay adjustment on actual wages, including steps and lanes

Sparta Area School District Board of Education · April 28, 2026

Loading...

AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

After extensive public comment and negotiations with the district’s union, the Sparta Area School District board approved a 2.63% salary increase applied to employees' actual wages and retained step/ lane movement; the board also approved certified staff contracts and sent longer-term compensation changes to a committee.

The Sparta Area School District Board voted to give certified staff a 2.63% salary increase applied to actual wages and to preserve scheduled step and lane movement, the board announced after a roll-call vote.

The decision followed more than an hour of public comment in which teachers and union representatives urged the board to apply the cost-of-living adjustment to employees’ actual salaries rather than to the district’s defined “base wage.” Michelle Glant, identified in the meeting as president of the Sparta Education Association, told the board the district’s method “pretend[s] like each teacher only makes [the lowest-paid salary] when figuring our CPI adjustment,” which she said produces a smaller raise for experienced teachers.

Administration and board members discussed two mechanics for implementing the agreed increase: adding 2.63% to the district’s base-wage schedule and then using supplemental pay to equalize employees’ total raises, or applying 2.63% directly to each employee’s total pay. The board voted to assure every eligible certified staff member receives the 2.63% on their current, actual wages and to preserve step and lane changes as part of that total adjustment.

Board members said the motion balances immediate needs with the district’s longer-term budget outlook. Board member Colin Burns Gilbert moved the motion; a second was offered and the increase was approved by roll call (vote recorded by the board). The board also approved certified staff contracts for the upcoming year immediately afterward.

Nut graf: The vote responds to union concerns that the district’s current base-wage methodology reduces raises for experienced teachers and contributes to salary compression; the board approved the across-the-board adjustment while directing a compensation committee to propose longer-term structural changes.

Board and administrative context: The action comes after an operating referendum failed in April and as the district projects multi-year budget pressure. Board members said they expect a separate, longer-term compensation review over the next year and directed administration and staff representatives to convene a 12-month compensation committee to recommend structural changes.

What happens next: The district approved the certified contracts and will implement the increase per payroll schedules; the board also authorized a compensation review committee to report back with model options and costs for future years.