Yuma Sun

GOP lawmakers working to give teachers bigger raise

- BY HOWARD FISCHER

PHOENIX — Republican lawmakers are working to line up the votes for a budget deal that would give teachers more than the 0.4 percent raise offered in January by Gov. Doug Ducey.

The package would provide an across-the-board raise of 1 percent this coming year, with another 1 percent over the next two years. That gets to the same 2 percent raise the governor had offered, but phased in over five years.

Senate Majority Leader Kimberly Yee said Ducey’s proposal, sketched out in his State of the State speech, was not going over well among members of the GOP caucus.

“We want a round number,” she told Capitol Media Services.

That 0.4 percent hike on the average $45,477 salary reported by the National Education Associatio­n — near the bottom of the nation — translates out to $181 a year for the average teacher, or about a dollar a day for the typical school year. And that’s before taxes.

By contrast, a 1 percent increase is $455 a year, with the promise of an additional amount the phased in over the following year or two.

But to fund the full penny this year would add another approximat­ely $20 million on top of what Ducey budgeted for his 0.4 percent raise; another penny on top of that would cost an additional $35 million. And that expense likely would have to be covered by lawmakers opting not to fund some of the governor’s other education priorities.

Among the possible losers are Ducey’s plan to put $10 million into restoring statefunde­d full-day kindergart­en, but only for schools in the poorest neighborho­ods, and a $1,000 bonus for teachers who agree to work at schools in which 60 percent of youngsters come from families eligible for free- or reduced-price lunches.

The bigger battle over the nearly $9.8 billion spending plan for the coming fiscal year could come over Ducey’s proposal to allow the universiti­es to keep $30 million a year they would otherwise pay in state sales taxes on items they buy.

Ducey wants that set aside as payments in a $1 billion borrowing plan for new constructi­on. While there is some sentiment for additional university dollars, many lawmakers are balking at the funding scheme which would remove their ability to control the dollars.

The governor also asked lawmakers to let universiti­es keep another $6 million they would otherwise pay in local sales taxes. That, however, has proven to be a non-starter amid opposition from affected communitie­s.

Also still up for debate is Ducey’s proposal to take more than $90 million collected in vehicle license fees and gasoline taxes to help fund the Highway Patrol.

The problem is those dollars would otherwise go for road constructi­on and repairs. Rural lawmakers contend their areas have been shorted for years and want those dollars restored.

There are alternativ­e source of revenue. One would be to ask voters to raise the 18-cent-a-gallon gasoline tax, a levy which has not been adjusted since 1991.

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