Teachers torn as retirement looms: Muskegon leads pack with 46 retirees
Published: Tuesday, June 15, 2010, 6:18 AM Updated: Tuesday, June 15, 2010, 7:45 AM
When Marsha Marek was in the throes of deciding whether to take the state’s retirement incentive for teachers, she turned to one of the core Democratic values she taught at Muskegon High: the common good.At age 53, Marek wasn’t ready to retire. She loved her job as a special education teacher and felt like she had “so much more to offer.” But she knew of young teachers who were facing layoffs. Her husband also is retired and the idea of spending more time together was appealing to Marek.
So late last week, she said her teary goodbyes to colleagues and joined the ranks of teachers taking the state up on its retirement incentive.
“I wanted to stay, selfishly, for me,” Marek said. “That would not have been the best decision for everyone else concerned. It wouldn’t have been the best for the younger teachers who got pink-slipped, it wouldn’t have been good for my family, financially.”
The state incentive, which combined the “carrot” of a higher pension and the “stick” of a higher payroll deduction for those who didn’t retire, was approved in mid-May for teachers with combined age and years of service totaling 80.
The idea was to save cash-strapped districts money by replacing higher-paid senior teachers with new ones at the lower end of the pay scale. The hope was that it also would open up job