|
Post by Hitch & Pitch on Aug 22, 2018 12:37:56 GMT -6
I am wondering what different states/districts pay assistant coaches???
|
|
|
Post by phinfan on Aug 22, 2018 13:07:06 GMT -6
In Alabama it varies widely. Single school city systems pay the most multi school county systems the least. I think most county systems are between $2500-4000 and cities might be same range or as high as $6,000 a small handful give an extra $500 or $1,000 for a coordinator or in some cases assistant head coach.
|
|
|
Post by fantom on Aug 22, 2018 16:57:34 GMT -6
I am wondering what different states/districts pay assistant coaches??? $1980.
|
|
mc140
Sophomore Member
Posts: 204
|
Post by mc140 on Aug 22, 2018 21:05:21 GMT -6
4k to 8k in Chicago Suburbs
|
|
|
Post by macdiiddy on Aug 22, 2018 22:41:19 GMT -6
Private School
$1500
|
|
|
Post by coachcb on Aug 23, 2018 8:23:06 GMT -6
In Montana, I've been paid between $1k and $3k. Schools that have a standing tradition of success in a sport will pay more, regardless of their tax base as the school boards don't have any issue giving raises there. Schools without success will generally pay the bare minimum.
One union tried to make get raises for coaches during negotiations (it's tied to our Master Agreement) but the school board's retort was simple: "Why should we coaches who lose more money?"
|
|
|
Post by fshamrock on Aug 23, 2018 8:26:03 GMT -6
varies in tx
small, poor school a varsity assistant will get 3k for football, I've heard of other guys getting up to 10...coordinators get an extra stipend on top of that (a few thousand bucks) this is on top of their teaching salary, we don't have non school employee coaches. Football coaches can also get extra contract days to cover the time they spend working before school starts, but districts are slowly but surely moving away from that because they suck and they know they can make us work for free and nobody will complain because you don't want to sound like you're not "doing it for the kids"
|
|
|
Post by msirishman on Aug 23, 2018 8:30:12 GMT -6
Varies greatly in MS. I've gotten anywhere from $2k - $11k.
|
|
|
Post by coachwoodall on Aug 23, 2018 10:00:42 GMT -6
SC varies 2-10ish that I know of
|
|
|
Post by Hitch & Pitch on Aug 23, 2018 10:52:17 GMT -6
I was coaching in California several years ago, and the district was going through a financial problem. One of the solutions was to cut coaching pay %50.
An AD asked the superintendent, what do we do if all the coaches quit, refuse to work for less? The superintendent who did a little coaching for a couple years, said "I know those coaches, they won't quit".
He was right...
|
|
|
Post by Defcord on Aug 23, 2018 11:19:49 GMT -6
I have been in Indiana, North Carolina, Florida and now South Carolina
Indiana $1500-$7500 is what I knew about North Carolina the school I was at every varsity assistant in all sports got $1000. No more; no less; no reason. Florida was 2000-3000 in the county I was in South Carolina my pay as a position assistant last year was $4500; this year I am a coordinator so I think it's $6500
I have heard stories of guys getting 15,000 to 20,000 in areas but I have never met those guy.
|
|
|
Post by fantom on Aug 23, 2018 11:35:45 GMT -6
I was coaching in California several years ago, and the district was going through a financial problem. One of the solutions was to cut coaching pay %50. An AD asked the superintendent, what do we do if all the coaches quit, refuse to work for less? The superintendent who did a little coaching for a couple years, said "I know those coaches, they won't quit". He was right... Same thing happened here except it was 25% instead of 50%. Some stipend positions were cut entirely. Thing is, that happened a few years ago. Since then they've started giving raises again but haven't restored the stipends.
|
|
|
Post by Hitch & Pitch on Aug 23, 2018 12:25:12 GMT -6
I was coaching in California several years ago, and the district was going through a financial problem. One of the solutions was to cut coaching pay %50. An AD asked the superintendent, what do we do if all the coaches quit, refuse to work for less? The superintendent who did a little coaching for a couple years, said "I know those coaches, they won't quit". He was right... Same thing happened here except it was 25% instead of 50%. Some stipend positions were cut entirely. Thing is, that happened a few years ago. Since then they've started giving raises again but haven't restored the stipends. Yep... Old saying "never let'em take something away, because they'll never give it back"
|
|
|
Post by realdawg on Aug 24, 2018 3:30:32 GMT -6
Where I am in NC I make almost 3G for the season as an AC. Pay scale starts at about 2200. This is a good paying area for NC
|
|
|
Post by crock1615 on Aug 24, 2018 9:14:18 GMT -6
the county where i work does 10% of the base teaching salary for assistant football coaches. So if your base pay was around 40k then the coaching supplement would be around 4k. The percentage is the same across the board at all high schools in the district. it is also the same regardless of coaching responsibility. So a coordinator would make the same as position coach.
|
|
|
Post by fantom on Aug 24, 2018 9:57:58 GMT -6
Same thing happened here except it was 25% instead of 50%. Some stipend positions were cut entirely. Thing is, that happened a few years ago. Since then they've started giving raises again but haven't restored the stipends. Yep... Old saying "never let'em take something away, because they'll never give it back" There's no "let" involved. We're a non-union state. Our contract negotiations go like this:
|
|
|
Post by mdunham on Aug 24, 2018 19:36:11 GMT -6
Our city - JV/Frosh I think get 3k (4 staff total between those 2) and varsity assistants get like 5-6k (think it's 2 maybe 3 positions not sure). Anyone else is volunteer. I got $500. It came out of booster funds.
|
|