The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Why some Georgia teachers may not get the full raise that’s part of the new budget,

Despite Deal’s 2% vow, some districts may fall short.

- By Molly Bloom molly.bloom@ajc.com and James Salzer jsalzer@ajc.com

The $25 billion state budget Gov. Nathan Deal signed Monday includes money the governor and legislativ­e leaders intended for pay raises for Georgia teachers. But in some districts, teachers may get raises short of the promised 2 percent bump.

Some metro Atlanta district officials say the state funding tied to the promised 2 percent raise was based on a state teacher’s salary schedule that is significan­tly lower than theirs. So the money from the state doesn’t add up to 2 percent locally.

It’s an all-too-familiar outcome for Georgia teachers. Last year, too, state leaders promised money would be set aside for teacher raises. But The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on reported that only 40 percent of school districts passed along the money as salary hikes.

Another 40 percent used at least some of the money on a one-time bonus. Others used the money meant for raises to reduce teacher furloughs,a result of the recession, or to fill holes in their school system budgets.

Most districts have yet to complete their budgets for the coming school year. But in metro Atlanta, at least three districts do not intend to give teachers 2 percent raises — Cobb, Atlanta and DeKalb.

Claire Suggs, senior education policy analyst at the left-leaning Georgia Budget & Policy Institute, said districts are still facing significan­t austerity cuts —about $167 million this year alone. She said districts also face pressure from increasing health insurance costs and teacher pension systems contributi­ons.

District leaders across Georgia are “keenly aware of the importance of paying a competitiv­e salary,” Suggs said. “They’re just struggling with some real budget challenges.”

Cobb County schools proposed a one-time 1.1 percent bonus for all permanent employees, including teachers and other staff members, as well as a full step increase — a raise for an additional year of experience — for eligible employees. That step increase will amount to a raise of about 1.5 percent.

The district awarded costof-living raises in the past two years, Cobb chief financial officer Brad Johnson said. But continuing financial pressure ruled cost-of-living raises out for this year, he said. Cobb allows senior citizens to opt out of paying school property taxes, and the county expects to forgo about $90 million in revenue from that exemption in the coming year. That is an increase of about $12 million from this school year’s budget, he said. Austerity cuts — a reduction from what districts are supposed to receive from the state under the school funding formula — account for another $10 million foregone.

Cobb, like most other metro districts, already pays teachers significan­tly more than the state minimum salary schedule.

Atlanta Public Schools’ proposed budget includes a 1.5 percent raise for most employees. The state funding works out to a raise of less than 2 percent for Atlanta staff because the district’s salary schedule is already higher than the state’s minimum salary schedule, district chief financial officer Robert Morales said.

DeKalb too has proposed awarding teachers raises in its coming budget that would amount to 2 percent on the state salary schedule, but slightly less on the district’s local salary schedule, district chief financial officer Michael Bell said. Those raises come on top of a series of raises for teachers totaling 5 percent in the current year.

Gwinnett County schools has proposed a 2 percent cost-of-living increase for all full-time employees. Fulton County has proposed a 2 percent pay raise for teachers and 1 percent for staff.

Jen Talaber Ryan, the governor’s spokeswoma­n, said Deal has pushed for teacher pay raises the last few years.

“It is the governor’s sincere hope that school boards pass this raise along to classroom teachers as intended by both he and the General Assembly,” she said.

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