Daytona West Observer

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DAYTONA WEST

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School Board raises teacher starting pay Board members said they’d like to raise veteran teachers’ pay next year. JONATHAN SIMMONS NEWS EDITOR

The Volusia County School Board voted 5-0 at a Jan. 25 meeting to approve a collective bargaining agreement with the teacher’s union, the Volusia United Educators. But even as they did so, some School Board members acknowledged that pay raises resulting from the state Legislature’s move to increase new teachers’ pay have also largely left out mid-career and veteran teachers. The state in 2020 pushed districts to work to raise teacher starting salaries to $47,500. Volusia County’s new contract does that, increasing the base salary for a new teacher with a bachelor’s degree to $47,500, up from $44,335 in the 2020-2021 school year. But the state set aside little money to increase the salaries of teachers who’d been teaching for years, leading to a situation in which some midcareer teachers in some districts are not making much more than the new hires receiving the $47,500 minimum. “We do have work that still needs to be done,” Volusia United Educators Union President Elizabeth Albert said at the meeting. “You know that we’ve got to do better for our mid-career and veteran teachers as far as salary goes. I have heard your commitment to doing that now that we’re at the $47,500.” The district also needs to work to raise staff salaries to $15, she said. “The pathway to $15 for our support [staff], that’s very critically important that we lay that out, and it would be wonderful if we could get there before 2026,” she said. Shane Story, a second-year teacher, told the board that he felt things were heading in the right direction, but that he had voted against ratification of the contract because he felt it did little to help the more experienced teachers who’d mentored him and other new teachers. “Think about how you would feel if you spent that much time in a position, and you look down and see somebody that just got here yesterday, and they’re making almost what you make. That’s depressing,” Story said. “Why would you stay in the same field, or why would you stay in the same county?” School Board member Jamie Haynes acknowledged the problem, then noted that the district’s ability to raise salaries is limited because of the way the state constrains school district budgets.

W O R T H O A O T H O U S A N D O W O R D S O A Ormond Beach mother stays connected with son through online word puzzles JARLEENE ALMENAS ASSOCIATE EDITOR

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Despite a physical distance of over 1,000 miles, one Ormond Beach woman and her son have never felt more connected. And it all started with the COVID-19 pandemic and an abundance of acrostic puzzles. At 8 or 9 years old, Peter Galea recalls, he began receiving monthly issues of Games Magazine, and he and his mother, Judy Eaton, would do puzzles together, long before the internet granted access to such things with the click of a mouse. A love of word puzzles has always been a shared passion, and Eaton said that Galea often claims that his parents made him play Scrabble before he knew what letters were. Still, almost four decades later, puzzles are what brought them closer in the middle of a pandemic when so many were feeling isolated. Galea, now 47, had the idea in March 2020 to complete one of New York Times’ acrostic puzzles online every day with his mother as a way to make sure neither would get lonely during the initial shutdowns. A software engineer in Austin, Texas, Galea ensured his 83-year-old mother in Ormond Beach downloaded the software AnyDesk on her computer so that she could see him typing in the answers to the acrostics as they spoke on the phone. Now, the pair have completed all of the available acros-

tic puzzles by the New York Times since 1999. That’s over 550 puzzles. “It’s kind of cool,” Galea said. “We didn’t set it out this way. We thought it was going to be a temporary thing as the pandemic started — two weeks or a month or whatever — but we’ve just really enjoyed it. As the quarantines have ebbed and flowed and things like that, we’ve just kind of kept going.” For Eaton, it’s been a wonderful way to communicate. “Even though he’s in Texas and I’m in Florida, we’re more connected than we have been, and we both love puzzles — we’ve always done them individually — so it’s a perfect thing to be doing together,” she said. WORDSMITHS

What makes acrostic puzzles different from your average crossword? An acrostic involves figuring out a quote by using crossword-style clues, where each letter in the quote corresponds to a letter in one of the clues. The more clue answers

you figure out, the more letters you’ll reveal in the quote. “It’s a back-and-forth process, jumping between the clues and the quotes, and we’ve always just kind of enjoyed that — the using of two different skills to solve the puzzle,” Galea said. The New York Times’ acrostic puzzles are available online, starting with the Sept. 12, 1999, puzzle, and are published bi-weekly. When Galea and Eaton got started, they never thought they would finish them all, but on Monday, Jan. 10, they finally caught up. Each of them have their own areas of expertise to help solve the clues in the puzzles. Galea is well-versed in the computer science and technology side of things, and Eaton is good with biology. “So we each have a trove of useless facts that occasionally are very helpful,” Eaton said. As they reached the end, she worried about their daily conversations coming to an end when there were no more puzzles to solve, but Galea reassured her he had no plans on stopping. They would just

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Judy Eaton, 83, said she felt grateful that her son suggested doing an acrostic puzzle every day to ward off the loneliness of the pandemic.

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Peter Galea said he remembers doing word puzzles as young as 8 or 9 years old with his mom.

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need to find a different kind of puzzle — maybe the puns and anagrams or the cryptic crossword. “I genuinely just enjoy hanging out with my mother,” he said laughing. “It’s been really nice doing something fun together.” ‘LIKE A BIG GIFT’

Their communication wasn’t always as constant as it is today. Galea lived in Thailand as a scuba diving instructor for seven years, and the conversations he was able to have with his mother were few and far between. The different time zones posed a difficulty, and so did the spotty internet. So when the uncertainty of the pandemic was setting in, and Galea suggested doing daily puzzles together, Eaton felt grateful. With her volunteering, at AdventHealth Daytona Beach and Meals on Wheels, and her mahjong playing groups coming to a pause, it beat doing puzzles alone in her home during the shutdowns. “He’s my only son, so you know, there’s a lot of pressure on him, but I knew I was just very grateful that he was going to do this,” she said. “It seemed like a big gift.” Galea also spends time every day playing online cribbage with his father, who lives in Miami. It’s a little way to connect with his parents, but it’s made a difference. “It’s too bad it took a pandemic to get that to happen, but it’s certainly been a silver lining of the pandemic,” he said. Galea said he looks forward to the activity every day — to hear how his mom is doing, and what her day has been like so far. “I guess doing a crossword puzzle is sort of a silly little thing, but it’s just some little activity, and it takes 15 minutes, and it’s something fun,” Galea said. “It gives a little bit of routine to the day as well, and it gives some connection. If you can find something like that, like my mom and I have, then I would recommend it.”

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