Albuquerque Journal

Arizona governor proposes 20% pay raise for teachers

Plan does not include raises for staff or boost school funding

- BY BOB CHRISTIE AND MELISSA DANIELS

PHOENIX — After weeks of protests by teachers, Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey rolled out a proposal Thursday promising a net 20 percent raise by 2020.

“It’s a good day for teachers in Arizona,” Ducey said to open a press briefing. Teachers did not immediatel­y react to the proposal.

Thursday’s announceme­nt came after more than a month of protests at the state Capitol and at schools across Arizona that were fueled by teacher discontent in West Virginia and Oklahoma.

The developmen­ts come after a group formed in March called Arizona Educators United has signed up more than 40,000 teachers and educators and threatened a walkout

Arizona teachers are among the lowest paid in the nation. According to the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics, Arizona elementary teachers earned a median wage of $43,280 in 2017 and high school teachers $46,470, the 3rd and 6th lowest in the nation, respective­ly. Adjusted for local cost of living, federal figures show elementary teachers actually rank 49th in earnings and high school teachers 48th.

Under the proposal, average teacher pay would go to over $58,000 by the start of 2020.

In addition to the pay bump, Arizona educators were also seeking increased pay for support profession­als, a permanent raise structure, and a freeze on corporate tax cuts until per-pupil spending reaches the national average.

The proposal rolled out by the Republican governor Thursday doesn’t increase funding for other school needs or provide raises for school staff as a grass-roots teachers group demanded.

Teachers and others held “walk-ins” at more than 1,000 schools Wednesday to draw attention to their demands, and Arizona Educators United said earlier this week that a strike date could be set soon.

Earlier Thursday, a proposal emerged in the Arizona House.

House Speaker J.D. Mesnard outlined a plan to boost teacher pay by 6 percent in the coming school year with annual increases that could lead to a 23 percent increase at the end of five years. However, the proposal does it by redirectin­g cash already committed or planned for school districts in coming years, so school districts would feel the squeeze.

The money comes by redirectin­g $400 million in cuts Ducey promised to restore to school districts over four years, requiring schools to use annual mandatory inflation boosts to give teachers pay raises and using money freed up once school constructi­on bonds are repaid in 2021. That money was already committed to teacher pay.

A top school business official said Mesnard’s plan would harm schools more than it would help teachers.

Chuck Essigs, director of government relations for the Arizona Associatio­n of School Business Officials, said taking an existing funding stream would further erode the ability to replace textbooks, school buses, computers to make repairs to facilities.

 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A protester waits for Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey to arrive at a radio station in Phoenix for a live broadcast Tuesday. The governor proposed a 20% pay raise Thursday.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN/ASSOCIATED PRESS A protester waits for Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey to arrive at a radio station in Phoenix for a live broadcast Tuesday. The governor proposed a 20% pay raise Thursday.

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