An anonymous donor is offering up to $15K to attract teachers to this B.C. school district
CBC
An anonymous donor is offering new teachers $10,000 each to move to the Central Interior and work in the local school district — with the offer going up to $15,000 if they choose to work in Lytton, the village ravaged by fire two years ago.
It's part of what's being dubbed a "welcome to the area" award, to School District 74, with the funds being distributed through a local community organization called Community Futures Sun Country.
SD74 covers rural and smaller communities to the west of Kamloops, including Ashcroft, Lillooet, Cache Creek and Lytton.
The award aims to place teachers across schools in Ashcroft, Lillooet and Lytton, each of which serve under 300 students.
SD74's push for new teachers comes amid a wider staffing shortage in B.C.'s schools, which has seen some districts resort to hiring uncertified teachers to work on call due to a lack of certified teachers.
Linsie Lachapelle, the general manager of Community Futures Sun Country, said 25 positions were vacant across the three schools.
"We kind of thought, well, let's think outside the box on a way to attract teachers to the area," she told Shelley Joyce, host of CBC's Daybreak Kamloops.
"Because I know once they move here, they'll see how wonderful it is and hopefully want to stay and put their roots in."
The award is set to be doled out in instalments, with 50 per cent of the award set to be given at the end of the school year.
For teachers who want to teach in Ashcroft or Lytton, the award comes with a district vehicle and gas cards if they want to commute from a nearby community, according to the school district. The award also includes a $7,500 relocation allowance.
"[Schools] are very much the heart of the community," Lachapelle said. "It's the way we keep our young families here that want to have kids.
"We wouldn't want to lose the school, then we'd have to bus our kids out."