Peggy Flach, SLP
Bethalto School District, Illinois
What did you do?
We requested employer payment of both Illinois Department of Professional Regulation fees ($100 every 2 years) and ASHA annual fees ($200).
What were your greatest challenges?
Attaining information concerning Medicaid billing, professional SLP qualifications and billing/reimbursement rates.
Providing a clear explanation of our credentials and fees to non-SLPs in order to compare similarities and differences between highest teacher and optimal SLP certifications.
What was the outcome of your effort?
Beginning in 2005 the Bethalto Unit #8 school district in Bethalto, Illinois sponsored payment of both ASHA fees and Illinois licensure renewal fees for the 5 full time SLPs.
What advice would you give others?
Become knowledgeable about the funding sources that offset your salary as well as the ways that SLPs influence revenue. Anticipate questions from the perspective of school administrators and teachers. In an attempt to make sense of the information, the domains and fiscal negotiation options; I offer The Banana Tree Analogy...
#1 Plant the tree
Be visible.
#2 Watch the tree grow
Keep doing #1 for awhile. Be patient.
#3 Shake the tree
...to your administration
...to your Medicaid intermediary
#4 Pick a banana and take a bite
Take on the smaller goal.
Ask for reimbursement/payment of credentialing fees in the light that SLP certifications provide eligibility in programs that bring in revenue .
#5 Take the whole banana
Go for total parity: fees + stipend
Promote SLP parity concerning Master Teacher equivalency stipends. "Master SLP" aptly describes the CCC via common vocabulary. Explore the ASHA website for success stories and research back issues of The Leader to bring precedents to light.
#6 Make banana bread
Spread the word
Take a professional and personal risk: communicate your successes and failures with your local, regional, state and national colleagues. Indeed, one day you might look in the banana tree and see...
#7 100 Monkeys
A shift
If you are unfamiliar with this story, go to The 100th Monkey. Here is the gist. At a certain point enough SLPs will have succeeded in moving to drive larger geographic changes. First one SLP...then a district...then a co-op/region...then a state...then a nation.
Precedents have already been set with local and statewide changes enacted.
If you look closely you can see that, indeed, that banana tree is getting a wee bit crowded!
Best of luck,
Peg Flach