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Jodi Mezzanotte is director of educator engagement for Educate Maine. She served in Maine schools for years as a teacher, district and building administrator.
What if there were a simple way to increase the number of teachers in Maine, retain talented educators who want to stay, and even address the serious gaps in some much-needed areas of education, like math, English and special ed?
There is. And that simple solution is within reach of the state Legislature.
We all know that Maine faces a significant teacher workforce gap. I was a teacher, district administrator and principal for many years, and now in my work at Educate Maine, and, particularly in the teacher-built and -led Teach Maine Center, I hear every day about what is happening on the ground. The message is consistent and urgent: Maine is in a workforce crisis, and our current teacher certification system, the pathway to work, is not keeping pace with the reality schools are facing.
Shortages have been identified in 17 areas, from elementary teachers to math and English, and especially in high-need areas like special education. Schools are doing everything they can to recruit and retain educators, but too often they lose strong candidates because the path to certification is overly rigid, time-consuming, and expensive, in ways that don’t always align with demonstrated competency.
LD 2175 is a bill that would increase the ability of school districts to find great teachers by streamlining the certification process for two groups who are essential to addressing shortages.
First, career changers from outside the field. Maine has talented professionals — people with deep content expertise, real-world experience, and a strong desire to serve their communities — who would be incredible educators. LD 2175 allows districts to build individualized certification plans that recognize relevant prior experience while addressing gaps in teaching experience through targeted coursework, mentoring, and classroom support. This is not a shortcut. It is a rigorous, evidence-based pathway.
Second, experienced educators who want to change their areas of focus. We have strong teachers already in Maine schools who are willing to move into high-need areas. Under current certification rules, they can be forced into duplicative or irrelevant coursework that doesn’t make them better educators — it just creates a barrier. LD 2175 would allow districts and candidates to focus learning where it’s actually needed, helping teachers transition more efficiently into shortage areas while maintaining high standards.
One of the reasons I support this legislation so strongly is that it encourages a shift away from “checkbox compliance,” and toward high-quality, targeted professional learning. It enables districts to fine tune development to the real needs of individual candidates, rather than requiring a one-size-fits-all list of courses. It also creates opportunities for districts to partner with Maine colleges and universities and regional providers, instead of relying on costly, out-of-state online coursework with uneven quality. This approach is a smarter use of limited resources: it can reduce unnecessary tuition costs, minimize recruitment and turnover expenses, and keep professional development dollars circulating within Maine’s education ecosystem.
And I want to be very clear about one point: LD 2175 does not replace traditional teacher preparation. The vast majority of Maine educators will still come through college-based pathways. This bill simply adds a structured, rigorous option for high-quality candidates who might otherwise walk away — candidates we cannot afford to lose if we are serious about ensuring every student has access to a qualified, well-prepared teacher.
In short, LD 2175 is a practical solution to a practical problem. It helps Maine grow and stabilize the educator workforce by making certification more responsive, more competency-based, and more supportive, without sacrificing standards.
Educate Maine urges legislators to vote favorably on this simple, effective bill. The future of Maine schools, and our students’ future, may depend on it.




