Summit Hill 161 Board Approves Longevity Pay Bumps for Non-Certified Staff
Summit Hill School District 161 | October 15, 2025
Article Summary: The Summit Hill District 161 Board of Education has approved a longevity-based pay increase for all non-certified staff, excluding paraprofessionals, effective November 1, 2025. The move is designed to reward longtime employees for their years of service to the district.
Non-Certified Staff Pay Increase Key Points:
-
The board approved hourly pay increases for non-certified staff based on their years of service.
-
The raises range from 25 cents per hour for employees with 1-5 years of service to $1.25 per hour for those with 21 or more years.
-
The new pay scale will take effect on November 1, 2025.
The Summit Hill School District 161 Board of Education on Wednesday, October 15, 2025, unanimously approved a new longevity-based pay scale for its non-certified employees. The hourly wage increase, which takes effect November 1, 2025, is designed to reward staff members for their continued service to the district.
The action, taken after the board returned from a closed session, will provide raises to all non-certified staff except for paraprofessionals. The increases are tiered based on an employee’s years of service:
-
1-5 years: 25 cents per hour
-
6-10 years: 50 cents per hour
-
11-15 years: 75 cents per hour
-
16-20 years: $1.00 per hour
-
21+ years: $1.25 per hour
The board approved the motion without public discussion, as the matter had been deliberated in closed session under an exception for collective negotiating matters and salary schedules. The approval formalizes a new compensation structure that directly ties hourly pay to an employee’s tenure with the district, providing a clear financial incentive for staff retention.
Latest News Stories
Illinois bill would force employers to pay employees regular wages for jury duty
VA suicide screening doubles after watchdog found mass failures
Trump says Iran agrees to no nuclear weapon, claims deal is close
Democrats call on Lutnick to resign over Epstein ties
Texas congressional delegation calls for federal investigation into H-1B visa fraud
Foxx: Prosecutors’ ‘silence’ on murder exonerations doesn’t mean ‘innocent’
Illinois Quick Hits: ISU union workers reach deal, return to work
Trump’s Iran objective moves from ‘surrender’ to nuclear deal
Democrats demand answers from Trump on consumer costs of Iran conflict
Illinois Dems eye $7B from new tax proposals, push ‘Billionaire Wealth Tax’
Plan would have state taxpayers provide $50M for ICE-impacted businesses
Homan threatens crackdown if New York limits ICE cooperation