Ron DeSantis: High School coaches need a pay raise

Florida governor Ron DeSantis wants a pay raise for high school coaches.

Show them the money.

That’s the message from Ron DeSantis, who believes that high school coaches in his state should make more. The Florida governor came out this week on behalf of his state’s high school coaches, stating that they don’t make as much as in other states.

Things are certainly on the move in Florida lately, with the state reportedly ready to allow NIL for high school athletes.

DeSantis, who ran in the Republican presidential primary earlier this year, said that there is a significant disadvantage between what Florida high school coaches are making and the rest of the country.

“I don’t want to say that money is everything, but I think you can make more money being like a high school football coach in Georgia because parents can do boosters and stuff,” DeSantis said according to Florida Politics.

“And look, I know there’s got to be guardrails on that, but I want it to be attractive to coach.”

There is a certain level of pessimism that the bill for a wage increase would pass, largely due to the financial implications for school districts as well as taxpayers.

In dealing with other pressing issues in Florida related to inflation and rising costs in the school district, better pay for high school coaches is likely simply not a priority.

It also may not raise the support of the teacher’s union.

In analyzing the issue, the Tampa Bay Tribune raised the question of “whether a substantial pay raise for coaches takes precedence over filling bus-driver shortages or constructing desperately-needed new schools.”

The issue might well be one that is decided based on the letter of the law. The Florida Coaches Coalition said that the stipends paid for most coaches don’t even meet the reasonable minimum wage standard.

That is an obvious issue, the coalition said, “because coaches are paid so far less than minimum wage (in almost all cases, less than 20%) that anyone who sees what we are asking for will ask, “Why don’t coaches in Florida make minimum wage?”

 

Going over Florida DC Austin Armstrong’s contract details

Florida brought in a young, new defensive coordinator after Patrick Toney left for the NFL. Here’s how much Austin Armstrong will be paid.

Billy Napier brought in [autotag]Austin Armstrong[/autotag] to fill the defensive coordinator spot left vacant by [autotag]Patrick Toney[/autotag], who is now working in the NFL. Armstrong is one of the nation’s youngest defensive coordinators but he doesn’t come cheap.

According to a report from All Gators, Armstrong is set to receive $1,100,000 in his first year at Florida and receive increases of $100,000 in each of the following two seasons. That puts the total value at $3,600,000 over three years.

Armstrong was initially going to serve as Alabama‘s inside linebackers coach this season after two years as Southern Mississippi’s defensive coordinator, but getting the chance to call defensive plays in the SEC is too good to pass up. The money is right, too.

The AllGators report also included the salaries of two new position coaches, tight ends coach [autotag]Russ Callaway[/autotag] and wide receivers coach [autotag]Billy Gonzalez[/autotag]. Callaway is earning $300,000 after moving from his analyst role, and Gonzalez is getting $500,000. Both are on two-year deals through the end of January 2025.

Napier has $7,500,000 to work with for the on-field staff and another $5,000,000 for off-field assistants.

Additionally, a trio of basketball assistants is making a combined $1,120,000. Carlin Hartman, who has a been a key recruiter for the staff on several big-name targets, leads the way with a $565,000 salary, and Korey Gray and Kevin Hovde bring in a reported $365,000 and $190,000, respectively.

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