Yuma Sun

INSIDE: Ducey rejects bills, asks for budget with teacher raises.

- BY HOWARD FISCHER CAPITOL MEDIA SERVICES

PHOENIX — Already fighting with educators over his pay hike plan, Gov. Doug Ducey opened a second front Friday, this time attacking members of his own Republican Party.

In a surprise move, the governor vetoed legislatio­n crafted and advanced by House Republican­s. Subjects range from regulation of electric bicycles and public meetings to warning parents about the dangers of interschol­astic sports.

But Ducey made it clear that the merits of each measure were irrelevant.

“Please send me a budget that gives teachers a 20 percent pay raise by 2020 and restores additional (school district) assistance,” he wrote in identical veto messages.

“Our teachers have earned this raise,” the governor said. “It’s time to get it done.”

The move caught GOP leaders by surprise.

“We try real hard to send up good policy bills,” House Majority Leader John Allen told Capitol Media Services. “These were vetoed because of politics, not policy.”

Ducey’s surprise move comes less than 24 hours after leaders of Arizona Educators United and the Arizona Education Associatio­n said their members will walk off the jobs this coming Thursday unless their demands are met.

That includes a 20 percent pay hike. But they contend the governor’s week-old offer to do just that falls short, and not just because it actually is only 19 percent over three years. They also want: • A system of future raises;

• No new tax cuts until state funding per student reaches the national average;

• Restore overall funding to 2008 levels;

• Competitiv­e pay for all education profession­als, meaning the support staff like counselors, reading specialist­s, lunchroom aides and custodians who are not included in Ducey’s plan.

And there’s something else. They say the governor’s plan to finance just the teacher pay plan largely with future revenues is not financiall­y realistic, being on disputed assumption­s of economic growth.

The educators are not alone in that belief. Legislativ­e budget staffers say they believe Ducey’s proposal, if enacted, would leave the state about $260 million in the red by 2020.

Allen said many GOP lawmakers are in accord with Ducey’s goal of a sharp increase in teacher salaries. And he said they do not necessaril­y disagree with his 20 percent proposal, a figure that still would leave teacher pay here below the national average.

But armed with the figures by their own budget analysts, they are weighing their own funding alternativ­es. And that, Allen said, will take time — time that Ducey is unwilling to provide, especially with the prospect of tens of thousands of teachers walking off the job Thursday morning and the national media coverage that would come with a strike in the largest state to date.

One option being considered is diverting money that Ducey wants restored to the “district additional assistance” account to instead fund teacher salaries.

Lawmakers and even Ducey himself drained that fund years ago in their effort to balance the budget. That sent schools scurrying to find other sources of revenue for the things that account is supposed to provide, like textbooks, computers, buses and even some repairs.

Ducey has proposed restoring $100 million in funding this year, eventually bringing the aid back to the full $371 million a year. And he considers tapping those dollars for teacher pay a non-starter.

The governor has now sent the message that the only plan he is willing to adopt is his own. He not only is unwilling to consider alternativ­e funding proposals being considered by GOP lawmakers but has decided he’s also not willing to negotiate with the leaders of the two education groups who have called for the strike.

But that list of “anyone” does not include the leaders of the AEA and AEU, the organizati­ons that announced Thursday they have a “clear mandate” for a walkout after 78 percent of the 57,000 teachers and support staff who voted cast ballots in favor of a job action.

“He’s willing to sit down with people who want to actually solve problems and get a raise to teachers,” Scarpinato said.

Scarpinato said educators “have had a seat at the table.”

Ducey also has met with the Arizona School Boards Associatio­n and other groups that support his teacher pay proposal and his method of financing it. And the governor has met with individual groups of teachers, some of whom are active in the #RedForEd movement.

But there’s also a political component to Ducey’s snub of the AEA in particular: It has endorsed Democrat David Garcia for governor in this year’s election.

The fact this is an election year has not been lost on those involved.

Even before Ducey released his teacher pay proposal, a group financed by business allies ran TV commercial­s touting all that the governor has done since being elected for education.

And Thursday the Republican Governors Associatio­n put up a commercial of its own, with video from the governor’s press conference last week announcing the pay plan and praising Ducey for “strengthen­ing our public schools without raising taxes.”

By law, the RGA’s spending cannot be coordinate­d with Ducey’s own re-election campaign.

 ?? FILE PHOTO BY HOWARD FISCHER/CAPITOL MEDIA SERVICES ?? GOV. DOUG DUCEY EARLIER THIS MONTH ANNOUNCING his teacher pay plan — the one that Republican lawmakers have yet to approve. At far left is House Majority Leader John Allen.
FILE PHOTO BY HOWARD FISCHER/CAPITOL MEDIA SERVICES GOV. DOUG DUCEY EARLIER THIS MONTH ANNOUNCING his teacher pay plan — the one that Republican lawmakers have yet to approve. At far left is House Majority Leader John Allen.

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