The Remuneration Authority has done teachers a favour. The Secondary Teachers' Collective Agreement expires later this year, and our union, the Post-Primary Teachers' Association, is preparing our new pay claim. The authority made it very easy for us to figure out our claim - it should be a raise of 5.5 per cent.
This, after all, was the increase the authority awarded Members of Parliament. Plenty of MPs, from Prime Minister John Key down, disingenuously declared themselves, as they prepared to wheel their barrows of cash to the bank, unworthy of this raise.
The PM has finally announced the Government will put forward a bill that will change the way the authority - a body established by MPs, answerable to MPs - decides how much money to throw at MPs. But it has taken him quite a while to address MP pay. He has, at last, taken steps to correct a system he's both benefited from and criticised, but not enough to take action, the public outcry presumably not having been enough to shame him into doing so until now.
Salaries for MPs continue to climb at a vertiginous rate. In 1976, the year before the Remuneration Authority was established, the top pay rate for a secondary school teacher was $14,580. Had teachers' salaries simply kept pace with inflation in the past 39 years, that number would now be $109,000, instead of the $72,000 it is - a third higher. Backbench MPs, in 1976, were paid less than top-band teachers; today, after their raise, they have a basic pay of $156,000.