No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeArchiveLaw Gives Teachers More Job Stability

Law Gives Teachers More Job Stability

Teachers may enjoy more job stability next school year after lawmakers last week approved legislation increasing the maximum number of classes they can teach.

The law, proposed in May by President Oscar Arias and Education Minister Leonardo Garnier after consulting with teachers’ unions, increases from 32 to 40 the maximum number of weekly classes that can make up full-time teaching jobs.

Teachers, paid per class, have trouble supporting themselves with just 32 classes, and most have supplemented their salaries with up to 12 temporary positions, or plazas interinas.

The text of the law acknowledges that a 32-class load “generates uncertainty and work-related instability…considering that the remuneration is not sufficient.”

Another problem was that the Education Ministry had trouble keeping tabs on teachers with temporary positions.

“It complicates the system of human resources and payment… and (creates) unnecessary procedures and tramités,” the law reads.

Arias must now sign the law for it to take effect. The President, who decides the legislative agenda during the extraordinary session in August, pushed the law through by calling for its debate.

The law’s passage was a principal demand by hundreds of teachers who went on strike in late July (TT, Aug. 3).

Edgar Durán, general secretary of the High-School Teachers’ Association (APSE), which called for the strike, said he is pleased with the law’s passage. The next step, he said, will be to monitor how the extra classes are distributed.

 

Trending Now

Costa Rica Presidential Election Could End in First Round

Conservative candidate Laura Fernández has increased her chances of winning Costa Rica’s presidency in the first round next Sunday, according to a poll released...

Canatur and FECOP Urge Coastal Costa Ricans to Vote in New Turnout Drive

Canatur and the Costa Rican Federation of Sport Fishing, FECOP, have launched a joint campaign aimed at boosting voter turnout in Costa Rica’s coastal...

Russian Family Deported from US Faces Ongoing Uncertainty in Costa Rica

A Russian family sent from the United States to Costa Rica under shifting U.S. immigration rules continues to navigate legal and personal challenges almost...

Costa Rica’s DGAC Stands Firm on Night Flight Ban Amid Patient Safety Concerns

Costa Rica's Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGAC) continues to enforce a ban on nighttime operations at most aerodromes, pointing to reports of activities...

Poás Volcano National Park Remains Shut as Bridge Repairs Drag On

Travelers planning a visit to Poás Volcano National Park face ongoing disruptions after authorities extended the closure of the site's main access route. The...

Costa Rica Reports First Chikungunya Case in Nine Years

Health authorities in Costa Rica reported the first chikungunya case in nine years. The patient, a 24-year-old man from Esparza in Puntarenas province, tested...
Avatar
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica