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Are High School Coaches Paid Too Much?

I just love the way the Associated Press uses a misleading title of an article and the first part of the story to totally mislead their reading audience.  The AP conducted a study of Texas’ High Schools using the Texas Information Act to find out what the state’s highest paid coaches were paid compared to teachers.

Football coaches at schools in the state’s two largest classifications average $21,404 more in salary than teachers, slightly less than they did 10 years ago, the Austin American-Statesman reported Sunday following an examination of public records.

The Statesman reviewed the salaries for the 2005-06 school year from schools in Classes 5A and 4A through documents obtained under the Texas Public Information Act. The findings were very similar to a similar study done by The Associated Press in 1996, using records from the 1995-96 school year.

The latest numbers show coaches making an average of $73,804, compared to $42,400 for teachers.

You have to dig way down into the article to find facts left out of the beginning which would make a difference to the readers.  First is the fact that the study only evaluated Head Coaching jobs, and does not included their assistant coaches.  Second, they leave out the fact that some teachers make more money than the head coach makes at the same high school.

The Statesman reviewed the total compensation paid to the head football coaches and salaries of their highest-paid teachers, high school principals and superintendents for all school districts with schools in 4A and 5A. To be classified in 4A or above, schools had to have at least 950 students; that covered 461 schools. There were 428 schools in 4A and 5A during the AP review. (snip)

In Houston, the district’s highest-paid teacher makes $95,191 — far more than the $76,913 drawn by the district’s top-paid coach, Tom Nolan of Houston Lamar.

And finally the kicker is near the bottom of the article which includes how many days a year each is paid and how many hours a week a coach works.  This sounds more like a joke than anything else.

Coaches receive a base salary, plus a coaching stipend that ranges from $1,000 to the $35,000 paid to Dodge. Their contracts usually are based on a 226-day work year, while teachers’ contracts are based on a 187-day year. It’s common for football coaches to log 70 to 100 per week during the season, including time on Saturdays and Sundays, compared to 40 to 70 per week for teachers.

As a former coach I can tell you that coaches work far more than 226 days a year and I worked a heck of a lot more than 70to 100 hours a week.  As an assistant football coach at a 4A High School, I worked seven days a week from 2-3 weeks from the start of school and through most holidays until the end of football season.  As an assistant coach I had other sports to coach like basketball and sometimes baseball.  There was no such thing as Spring break or Christmas break.  Summers were filled with football camps, coaching camps, weight rooms to open and other such duties.  During football season my day started at 0700 in the morning and ended at 1900 on practice days.  Three days a week we played football: varsity, junior varsity, and freshmen squads.  On game days, the day ended when all the equipment was stored, students gone and films broken down.  Saturday started at 0800 and ended at 1800.  Sundays started at 1400 and ended at 2100-2200.  This did not include preparing for classes and grading papers.  Coaching involves a lot of long days and long hours.

This is not complaining.  I could not wait to go to work and did not want to go home—I loved my job.  But there was not one teacher at my school who wanted to trade hours with me.  Their day started at 0800 and ended at 1600 on weekdays.  Then there is the issue of job security.  Teachers only have to teach to keep their jobs—coaches have to win games to keep theirs.

I was a highly paid assistant coach.  Once I tried to figure out how much I was making per hour while working after school while coaching.  I was making a whopping 50 cents an hour.  What the school did not know was I would have worked as a coach for nothing.

What I find disturbing about the article is how misleading it is.  Sure coaches make more money than teachers, but a winning coach will bring in paying fans.  The schools make a lot of money from winning sports.  Good Head Coaches are worth every dime their paid.  They bring in money, prestige, and good teachers.  Most coaches are in the business because they love their jobs, while many teachers are just going through the motions with their jobs.

So I wonder, did the writers had an agenda or did they just conduct poor research.  If the AP writers were doing their research, they would know the hours coaches work and what they bring to their school.

Moonbats in Utah

I have found war protester Cindy Sheehan in a suit and tie and his name is Rocky Anderson, the mayor of Salt Lake City, Utah.  He is just as shrill and just as kooky as Cindy.  Rocky is joining a protest of President Bush as he speaks to the American Legion in a new effort to set the record straight on why we are in Iraq and remembering the attack on September 11th, 2001.  The mayor has shown an incredible lack of class by joining the protests.  When the Democratic Party had their National Convention in Massachusetts, Governor Mitt Romney, a Republican, welcomed them even though he did not agree with many, if not most, of their stances.  In welcoming them, the Governor showed a lot of class.  But apparently class is lacking in the Democratic Party as shown by the behavior of the mayor in a very conservative state.  When the President comes to town, at the very least the mayor should be there to welcome him as a common courtesy.

But Rocky Anderson’s behavior has displayed for all to see, the tip of a much larger iceberg, Democrats have forgotten that we are at war.  Take for instance this poll taken by the Daily Kos, a popular website of the extreme left.  (Hat tip: Daily Kos via Right Wing News)

Ever since that fateful day in September, the Democratic Party has been in denial: denial that we were attacked by Islamofascists, and denial that we are at war.  Make no mistake about it; this is a war we must not lose.  For if we do the west as we know it is doomed.  Freedom of the press, freedom of speech, freedom of worship, freedom from unreasonable searches and seizures, freedom to be secure in our houses, and the right to a fair trial will all be gone if the Islamists win.  The Democrats philosophy towards the terrorists seems to be wrapped up in one little 1960s-70s slogan, “Why can’t we all just get along?”  They seem to think that by understanding our enemies, they will not hate us.  This is just wishful thinking, because the Islamists hate us for who we are.  They hate us for our rights, they hate us because of our culture, and they hate us because of our religions.  Sitting around in circles sing kum by yah with flowers in our hair just makes us quick and easy targets.

Donald Rumsfeld speaking before the American Legion convention in Salt Lake City, Utah has pretty much pigeon-holed the Democratic Party of today.

Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld on Tuesday accused critics of the Bush administration’s Iraq and counterterrorism policies of lacking the courage to fight terror.

In unusually explicit terms, Rumsfeld portrayed the administration’s critics as suffering from “moral and intellectual confusion” about what threatens the nation’s security.

He went on to say that many critics have not learned from history’s lessons.  There is an history axiom which states, “Those who do not know their history are doomed to repeat it.”  President Roosevelt knew the risks posed by inaction before World War II as did President Kennedy with the Cuban Missile Crisis and President Reagan with the Cold War.  These are men who faced a critical moment in history with decisiveness against many critics.  In this Global War on Terror, President Bush having learned from history knew doing nothing was the worst thing he could possibly do.  And so when we were attacked, this President faced a monumental decision either to send a few missiles into an empty desert and claim victory or to fight and win a long struggle against those who have been attacking this country for years.   With history in his corner, George W. Bush has become the first of what I hope will be many presidents who will declare war on terrorism.

Most of the people of Utah seem to understand and approve of how the President is conducting the war.  On the other hand, they do not approve of what the anti-war protesters are doing.  A poll of registered voters believes people like Cindy Sheehan and Mayor Rocky Anderson are undermining our war on terrorism.

The message seems to bolster a poll commissioned by The Salt Lake Tribune that shows 45 percent of Utahns believe anti-war demonstrators such as Anderson and Sheehan “aid the enemies of the U.S.” Some 27 percent say they “play an important role in the national debate over U.S. policy in Iraq.” Another 28 percent weren’t sure. The poll of 625 registered voters was conducted by the Washington, D.C.-based Mason-Dixon Polling & Research firm this month.

“Part of what undermines our strength is our enemies thinking we have weakness within our ranks,” [Jeff] Hartley [Utah Republican Party Executive Director] said. “If they can pressure us to cut and run and give up the fight . . . if politicians like Rocky Anderson prevail, then we’ll give up and quit.”

Jeff Harley is right.  These far left kooks are emboldening our enemies much like Jane Fonda did during the Vietnam War.  The actions of Sheehan and Anderson are helping our enemies and killing American soldiers.  The terrorists watch the news too.  They know if they kill enough soldiers, hold on just a little while longer, and if the ever compliant American media tell enough bad news; then the American people will demand the President pull the troops out of Iraq.

President Lincoln held tough against much public criticism and eventually won the Civil War.  President Roosevelt held tough when he fought Germany first and led the US in a victory against Nazism.  President Reagan held tough against public criticism and won the Cold War.  If President Bush and future presidents hold tough in the face of public criticism, the US will win in the GWOT.

Much of the public criticism against President Bush is from those few loud protesters who don’t like any war, even when this country is attacked as it was on September 11th.  Whether we are at war with the terrorists is immaterial; they are at war with us.  A fact the far left moonbats seem to have forgotten.  The Democratic Party is a more than willing partner of the far left if it means money and winning elections.  The defeat of Joe Lieberman in Connecticut’s Democratic Party Primary shows there is little room in the party for warriors.  They might as well hold up a sign which reads, “Only wimps need apply”  If there is one thing Rocky Anderson has done, it is to show the rest of the United States that Democrats can not be trusted to keep us safe in the post 9/11 world.