Texarkana Gazette

Arizona teachers push to tax rich for education

- By Melissa Daniels

PHOENIX—On a sweltering Arizona evening under a park pavilion, math teacher Heather LaBelle handed out petitions for a ballot initiative that would increase taxes on wealthy residents to get funding for schools. Later that night, her school board voted to give her and her fellow teachers an average raise of 15.5 percent.

LaBelle, like many in Arizona’s #RedforEd movement that triggered a six-day teacher walkout, says improving teacher pay is just one step toward better schools.

“The longer we wait, the longer we have a generation and two generation­s of kids that don’t have the tools they need,” she said.

Arizona was a key state in a spring that saw teachers around the U.S. mobilize to demand better education funding. They wound up netting hundreds of millions of new dollars in the state budget—much of it going to teacher pay raises—after their historic walkout shuttered most of Arizona’s schools.

Districts around the state have since spent the end of the school year authorizin­g the first rollout of their pay raise plans—even as the growing teachers movement turned its attention to qualifying and passing a ballot initiative that would funnel nearly $690 million annually to education. The new state budget authorizes a 20 percent teacher pay raise over the next three years. When fully implemente­d, the plan will cost $645 million, according to a state budget analysis. There’s also a partial restoratio­n of nearly $400 million in recession-era cuts, with a pledge to fill in the rest within five years.

But some say the funds aren’t nearly enough to reverse Arizona’s teacher vacancy crisis and address longstandi­ng concerns like crumbling infrastruc­ture, large class sizes and lagging math and reading scores.

“School districts still have needs way beyond what this plan pays for,” said Chris Kotterman, director of government­al relations with the Arizona School Boards Associatio­n.

For LaBelle and others, that’s where the ballot initiative comes in. The Invest in Education Act would increase income taxes for those who earn more than $250,000 a year. Sixty percent of the money raised would go toward teacher pay, with the rest earmarked for mainte- nance and operations.

Supporters must collect more than 150,000 valid signatures by July 5 to get the initiative on the November ballot. Joe Thomas, president of the Arizona Education Associatio­n that co-helmed the walkout, is bullish about its prospects. People are willing to tax themselves to give students a quality education, he said.

An April poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research found half of Americans would pay higher taxes to pay teachers more and provide money to schools, with 26 percent opposed. The results cut differentl­y on a partisan basis: 69 percent of Democrats said yes to higher taxes for schools compared with 38 percent of Republican­s and 30 percent of independen­ts who say the same. Opponents of the Invest in Education Act, including the Arizona Chamber of Commerce, maintain it would harm small-business owners and the state’s economy.

Republican Gov. Doug Ducey says he won’t comment on ballot initiative­s until they qualify, but he’s been vocally opposed to tax increases.

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