MILWAUKEE — Class is back in session for Milwaukee Public Schools.
Governor Tony Evers joined district leaders Tuesday morning at Browning Elementary School to help kick-off the first day of classes.
The governor says the state continues to address an ongoing teacher shortage.
“At ​the ​end ​of ​the ​day, ​we ​really ​need ​to ​have ​people understanding ​what ​an ​important ​job ​teaching ​is ​and ​working ​in ​a ​school ​district ​is,” said Evers. “Because it’s ​our ​future and it’s ​all ​about ​our ​kids. ​Across ​the ​state ​of ​Wisconsin, ​yeah, ​there’s ​still ​a ​shortage, ​but we’re ​working ​on ​it ​the ​best ​we ​can.”
In MPS there are currently 98 open teaching positions. Superintendent Dr. Brenda Cassellius says some central office employees, who are certified teachers, are currently filling those roles.
“I ​have ​made ​it a ​priority ​that ​we ​would ​fill ​every ​single ​vacancy,” said Cassellius. “​Our ​HR ​department ​has ​worked ​really ​hard ​to ​fill ​all ​vacancies. ​We ​have ​about ​98 ​classroom ​vacancies ​still. ​So ​we ​took ​licensed ​staff ​and ​were ​able ​to ​get ​them ​into ​classrooms ​so ​that ​kiddos ​had ​a ​classroom ​teacher ​in ​front ​of ​them. We ​will ​continue ​to ​try ​to ​fill ​those ​vacancies ​over ​the ​next ​month.”
This is also the first full school year in MPS for Cassellius as she started her job as superintendent back in March.
“We’ve ​already ​made ​some ​huge ​strides ​just ​in ​the ​last ​six ​months in MPS,” she said. “Really ​creating ​safe ​buildings, ​addressing ​the ​lead ​crisis, ​and addressing ​our ​financial ​crisis ​that ​we ​had.”
































