Paraparaumu College held a lunchtime barbecue during the secondary school teachers鈥 strike with funds raised going to the K膩piti Community Foodbank.
Despite no students being present, because of the strike, various staff braved the polar blast conditions to grab a sausage sizzle and support the charity.
Helping with the barbecue was Te W膩nanga o Aotearoa Wellington regional chair Kevin Greig who said there had been a 7.3 per cent increase in inflation over the past 12 months, with a predicted 6 per cent increase for the next 12 months.
Greig said he鈥檚 fighting for the new teachers, who despite having a four-year degree, are only being paid about $1 more than minimum wage.
听鈥淪omeone packing supermarket shelves, or somewhere else, is making just $1 less than first-year teachers.鈥
A lot of potential teachers were thinking twice about the profession.
鈥淚t鈥檚 not an attractive profession like it used to be.鈥
He said a lot of new teachers had student loan debts, and with the cost of living being so high many of them couldn鈥檛 afford to even buy a block of cheese.
听鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 matter if you can buy a cheaper phone if you can鈥檛 even buy a loaf of bread.鈥
Another teacher, who didn鈥檛 want to be named, said that if nothing happens in the next 5-10 years there will be no teachers.
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The teacher went on to say that education is one of the pillars of society and that the Government needed to invest in the future 鈥 children.
鈥淚f we lose education, society fails,鈥 the teacher said.
鈥淵ou can鈥檛 invest in the past, you have to invest in the future,鈥 Greig added.
Greig said it鈥檚 not all about money either, but for him at the higher end of the scale, it鈥檚 also about working conditions.
He said teachers are being asked to do more tasks for the same pay and asked, 鈥渨hen did teachers become other professions?鈥.
He said that teachers鈥 conditions are being extended all the time.
鈥淚f you鈥檙e going to add another brick to the wall, tell us which one to take off.鈥
He added that 鈥渢he wall鈥 is at its maximum capacity.
鈥淲e鈥檙e being asked to do more and there鈥檚 no recognition of what we need to do less to be able to do more.鈥
Greig also said that with truancy becoming a big issue, teachers and families are taking all the blame, and said the Ministry of Education needs to take responsibility too.
鈥淭he ministry needs to take responsibility because they are the oversight.鈥
There are over 20,000 members of the PPTA, and after being polled twice about what action needs to be taken, Greig said it鈥檚 clear they are all fed up.
鈥淚t鈥檚 very frustrating.鈥
Also manning the barbecue was Paraparaumu College Post Primary School Teachers鈥 (PPTA) union representative Elliot Pilmore, who said despite inflation, teachers鈥 wages are not increasing.
鈥淲e鈥檙e losing our best teachers overseas.鈥
听
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