Thank you for posting the grid. I still maintain that it is disingenuous to only consider salary as there is a 10% pension match. That means your actual yearly cashflow (assuming you're not an idiot) is 10% higher. No private sector employer (nor most government branches) match anywhere near 10%.
This is also for a job that works ~40 weeks a year so to calculate a comparable yearly compensation you need match a typical work year of ~49 weeks. That results in another 22.5% bump (49/40) in effective compensation.
If I understand you right, you are marching down by one cell every year plus whatever the negotiated raise is? So for the past five years, assuming teachers continue their professional development and are able to move right a column every ten years or so, they are getting raises of >7% a year. Completely out of touch with inflation, reality or most private sector jobs.
It’s a good gig then...more people might want to choose the profession! Except for one thing, it’s not easy to get into. There’s a reasonable investment in a university education followed by teachers college. There has to be some expectation that the outlay/investment will be recompensed. People seem to treat this profession like anyone can do it but that’s not true at all.