In Texas, Rural Teachers Face A Big Pay Gap

Even if the legislature gives educators an across-the-board pay raise, as some leaders have suggested, teachers in many rural districts will still rank far behind their urban and suburban counterparts.

By Will BurneyJanuary 29, 2019 9:30 am

According to the most recent data, Texas ranks 28th in teacher salaries. And Texas teachers make about $7,000 less than the national average. But that could change, with some legislators and state leaders talking about an across-the-board raise.

Sounds great, right? Well, maybe not for rural teachers, who can lag significantly behind their urban and suburban counterparts, compensation-wise.

Linda Rothey is from Dallas, and calls herself a city girl at heart. For the past year, though, she’s taught elementary special education in Alpine, a small West Texas town about two-and-a-half hours from a major airport.

“This is country living at its finest,” Rothey says.

Her husband’s job brought them to here, and so far, she’s enjoying the close community and mountain scenery.

“We don’t have a Home Depot, we don’t have a Lowes, we don’t have those creature comforts….we don’t even have a Walmart,” she says.

But teacher salaries here are lower than what she was used to. On average, a beginning teacher at Alpine ISD makes about $32,000. Rothey has been teaching for about five years, so she makes a bit more. Still, she says, “There is a huge pay gap, I was hired in Coppell ISD and I was offered $20,000 more than I’m paid here.” she says.

Coppell is a Dallas suburb. Katy ISD, outside Houston, will hire a teacher with zero experience at around $53,000. In Dallas, $51,000, and San Antonio ISD, just north of $52,000. Teachers in rural communities can work for 20 years and never reach those heights.

Of course, rural schools want to pay teachers more, but their budgets are limited. The state’s share of public school funding has dwindled over the years, leaving local districts to fill in the gaps with property tax revenue. And, generally speaking, a pasture doesn’t generate the same tax revenue that a shopping mall does.

This year, state leaders have vowed to fix this system.

“We are going to reform school finance in Texas this session, and we are going to reform property taxes this session,” said Gov. Greg Abbott.

“We are putting teachers first this session,” Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick said.

In his inauguration speech, Patrick touted a bill that would give a $5,000 raise to every teacher in the state.

“It’s been 20 years since they’ve had an across-the-board raise,” Patrick said.

Many educators feel that has been a long time coming, but an across-the-board-raise won’t close the pay gap Alpine ISD teacher Linda Rothy describes.

“As much as I love the opportunities we’ve had here, I do miss what the city offers especially as educators,” Rothey says.

And when teachers leave rural districts for higher-paying ones, it hurts students. A 2017 report from the Texas Education Agency’s Rural Schools Task Force showed schools with low teacher turnover performed the best.

TEA’s Mark Winchester was the facilitator for that task force. He says many of the superintendents and teachers he met stay in rural districts because of their connections to the area.

“They really do love the idea that they can watch other children and their own children grow up. The pride and the dedication to a rural lifestyle is very inspiring,” Winchester says.

Mindy Morgan is one of those teachers. She teaches junior high math in Risel ISD. Morgan grew up in this little town, just 20 minutes outside Waco, and wanted to be close to her mom and dad.

“it’s little things like at the end of the day that my kid can ride the bus to her grandparents house and have somewhere to go,” Morgan says.

Sure, she says most teachers didn’t get into teaching for the money, but it would still be nice to make more.

“Teaching is hard in teaching stressful and money can’t make it less stressful but it can help you afford to not stress over what you’re gonna cook for supper that night. I don’t think that money buys happiness, but sometimes it can make your life a little less stressful,” Morgan says.

She’s glad Texas lawmakers are thinking about teacher pay and would welcome a $5,000 raise.

“I think it’s a piece but I don’t think that alone is enough to fix the problem,” Morgan says.

Morgan says her sister is currently working on her teacher certification. She hopes, in the near future, her sister won’t have to choose between living near family in the country, and making a competitive teacher’s salary.