BALTIMORE
The Maryland Board of Regents has approved giving traditional benefits to long-term contractual lecturers. Some lecturers at Coppin State and Frostburg State universities weren’t even getting health insurance, even though they have been teaching for more than 10 years. The Baltimore Sun reported in December that nearly 300 full-time instructors were not eligible for retirement and other benefits.
The new policy, approved Friday by the board, requires colleges to give individual health coverage to all full-time contractual lecturers. Beginning in the fall of 2008, lecturers with a decade of continuous service also will get retirement benefits comparable to regular state employees.
In the fall of 2009, those employed for at least six years will get retirement benefits.
“We feel that this policy provides very meaningful benefits to an important category of staff who are providing very significant services to our students,” says university system chancellor William Kirwan.
David Parker, president of the system’s faculty council, says the new policy is “a good start” but doesn’t go far enough.
“It doesn’t do anything meaningful,” says Parker, a math professor at Salisbury University. “It’s nice. We don’t want anyone to lose a benefit they wouldn’t otherwise receive, but it doesn’t address the underlying issue.”