Kent School District seeks job applicants

At a time when many businesses in the region and state are announcing layoffs and closures, the Kent School District is in the opposite boat, unable to permanently fill about 30 professional positions within the district.

At a time when many businesses in the region and state are announcing layoffs and closures, the Kent School District is in the opposite boat, unable to permanently fill about 30 professional positions within the district.

Around Kent, speech and language pathologists, occupational therapists, psychologists, special-education teachers and other positions are in short supply. The district also is looking for school nurses and math and science teachers.

Though many of the openings are filled through agency hires, the district is looking to put permanent employees into those jobs as soon as possible and is hosting a job fair March 3 in hopes of meeting the right candidates for the jobs.

“We have positions this year and we are looking to hire for the fall,” said Recruitment and Diversity Supervisor Victoria Moreland.

The use of agency hires has been a bone of contention between the district and the Kent Education Association, which represents teachers, for some time.

The union in the past has said the district’s not permanently filling those positions violates their contract and prevents those hires from paying union dues, since workers in those positions work for the agency, not the district.

Filling those positions on a permanent basis has been a union request for some time.

“That’s our goal too,” Moreland said. “When you fill a position with a permanent employee, they have a vested interest in the district.”

Moreland said the biggest problem facing the district is that there is a small pool of professionals certified in those jobs, with every district in the state competing for their attention.

“There’s only so many speech pathologists out there,” she said, adding “And even now in these tough economic times you don’t have many nurses being laid off.

“There’s a supply and demand issue right now,” she said.

Moreland said the district would prefer to pay a permanent hire directly rather than pay an agency because it would save them money, as well as provide more consistency to the students being served by the people in those positions.

“When you find people that want to work here and make that commitment,” Moreland said, “they’re getting to know the community and families.”

Moreland said the district’s biggest need is in speech pathologists. The district presently has 14 agency hires in those positions, though Moreland admits that being able to fill even five of those slots would be a good start.

“That would be wonderful,” she said.

The district hosted a job fair last year, which included classified positions as well as certificated personnel. Moreland said approximately 200 applied for positions and several hires were made. This year, however, due to the district’s budget crisis, few if any hires are expected.

“Of anyone comes in we’ll talk to them, we just don’t have any positions,” Moreland said.

The job fair also will include sessions on interview tips and other job-search related topics.

If you go

The Kent School District job fair is set for 3-7 p.m. March 3 at the District Administration Center, 12033 S.E. 256th St., Kent. For more information, call 253-373-7534 (certificated positions) or 253-373-7206 (classified positions).


Talk to us

Please share your story tips by emailing editor@kentreporter.com.

To share your opinion for publication, submit a letter through our website https://www.kentreporter.com/submit-letter/. Include your name, address and daytime phone number. (We’ll only publish your name and hometown.) Please keep letters to 300 words or less.

More in News

t
Two Kent-Meridian High School students win photography awards | Photos

Emily Fong won for flag football photo; John Sanchez won for football feature profile photo

Kent Reporter photo
Kent Police arrest man wanted by Seattle Police for child rape

Issaquah man, 39, taken into custody without incident at Kent Valley business

COURTESY FILE PHOTO, Comcast/Xfinity
Comcast reports May 19 outage in Kent from vandalized cables

Service expected to be restored later in the day; second outage in a month

City of Kent Corrections Facility, 1230 Central Ave. S. COURTESY PHOTO, Kent Police
Medical examiner rules Kent female inmate jail death as ‘natural’

45-year-old woman died April 22 in City of Kent Corrections Facility

Kent Reporter photo
Kent Police Blotter: April 28 to May 11

Incidents include wanted woman, caught on camera, 99 Ranch Market robbery

Howard Hanson Dam along the Green River. COURTESY FILE PHOTO, U.S. Army Corps
Murray blasts Trump administration for cutting Hanson Dam funds

Congress had awarded $500 million for fish passage, water storage project; funds headed to red states

The Great Wall Shopping Mall, 18230 E. Valley Highway in Kent. COURTESY PHOTO, Great Wall Shopping Mall
Asian residents target of robberies in Kent, other cities

Kent Police issue crime alert for people to be ‘informed and vigilant’

T
Please subscribe and help support local journalism in Kent

The Kent Reporter is offering readers a new premium service that will help strengthen our mission to provide quality local journalism in the community.

City of Kent Corrections Facility, 1230 Central Ave. S. COURTESY PHOTO, Kent Police
Kent Police investigating city jail inmate death at local hospital

Medics transported Kent man, 36, to hospital after medical emergency in jail

t
Kent School District superintendent fined for election violations

State Public Disclosure Commission determines election law rules broken by Israel Vela, district staff

Kent Reporter Photo
Kent Police arrest husband for attacking his wife

Reportedly pointed a gun at her; assaulted family member who came to help

t
Kent Police overtime costs jump to $4.1 million in 2024

A 58% increase from 2021; two officers made more than $100,000 each in OT