El Dorado News-Times

Sanders unveils state education plan; $50K starting pay, vouchers key points

- NEAL EARLEY

Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders announced on Wednesday plans to increase the state’s starting teacher salary by $14,000 and offer vouchers to every student as part of what she described as “the most far-reaching, bold and conservati­ve education reforms anywhere in the entire country.”

Speaking in front of a group of GOP lawmakers at the state Capitol, the Republican governor unveiled details of her long-awaited plan to overhaul education within the state.

The proposal includes raising the state’s minimum teacher salary from $36,000 to $50,000 a year, and the voucher program would allow students to attend private or home schools. The voucher program, called education freedom accounts, will be phased in over three years, the governor said.

Sanders said her plan also will include funding for reading coaches to improve literacy, bonuses “to our best educators,” grants for struggling students to hire tutors and a “dual diploma program” to better prepare students to enter the workforce upon graduation.

“Despite spending half of our state’s budget on education, our kids are falling behind,” Sanders said. “Only 35% of Arkansas third-graders can read at grade level, and nearly half don’t meet our state’s math readiness benchmark. This is unacceptab­le.”

The proposal drew praise from Sanders’ fellow Republican­s, many of whom stood behind her on the steps leading up to the House chamber as she detailed her proposal. Democrats, who said they want to work with Sanders on increasing teacher pay, said they won’t support a bill that includes vouchers.

The governor outlined her view on education while campaignin­g through what she dubbed as Arkansas LEARNS, an initiative that she said will serve as the basis for her education overhaul, with an emphasis on literacy, empowering parents, accountabi­lity for teachers, career readiness for students, high-speed internet access and improved security at schools.

“This is the most substantia­l overhaul of our state’s education system in Arkansas history, and frankly it couldn’t come soon enough,” Sanders said Wednesday. “The longer we wait to reform our failing schools, the more future gen

erations we’re condemning to a lifetime of poverty.”

PAY FOR TEACHERS

Sanders’ proposal to raise starting pay for teachers to $50,000 would increase 15,249 teachers’ salaries to the new minimum, according to a news release from her office. The proposed increased starting salary is one of several ideas to recruit and retain teachers in the state.

While Sanders has said previously that she supports increasing teacher salaries, Wednesday was the first time the governor gave specifics on what it could look like for the state’s educators. She said the increase would move Arkansas from 48th in the nation in starting teacher salaries into the top five.

The governor also proposed forgiving teachers’ student loan debt if they commit to working in the areas of highest need within the state, and a $10,000 bonus to educators who are “making meaningful gains in the improvemen­t of student outcomes.” Sanders’ proposal also includes 12 weeks of paid maternity leave for teachers and unspecifie­d salary increases for all teachers.

Law makers have addressed increasing teacher pay through incrementa­l changes, passing Act 170 in 2019 that gradually increased starting salaries for teachers. For the 2022-2023 school year, the minimum salary for teachers was $36,000. Sanders’ plan calls for increasing the minimum to $50,000 for the 2023-2024 school year.

Anticipati­ng Sanders’ education proposal, Democrats unveiled plans for their own teacher pay raise bill in late January, also calling for a $50,000 minimum starting salary, a $10,000 raise for every public school teacher, and raising wages for classified staff from $11 an hour to $15.

While Democrats said they want to work with Sanders on raising teacher pay, House Minority Leader Tippi McCullough, D- Little Rock, said the party won’t support a bill that includes funding for vouchers.

“Even if there are some things that we’d like to support, that we could support, we just can’t do it because we believe the voucher part of it is going to be a systematic dismantlin­g of the public school system in Arkansas,” McCullough said.

SCHOOL CHOICE

Sanders’ plan would give parents the choice to send their children to public, private, parochial or home school through an education savings account dubbed an “Education Freedom Account.” The education savings account would give parents 90% of what schools are funded on a per-student basis, but the exact details are still being worked out, said Arkansas Education Secretary Jacob Oliva. For the 2022-2023 school year, public schools were funded at $7,182 per student.

“There’s some nuances, there’s some technicali­ties that we’re still working through,” Oliva said.

Sanders said school choice was “the civil rights issue of our day,” with her plan for education savings accounts being phased in over three years and with every student in the state being eligible by the 2025-2026 school year.

“Families find themselves trapped in failing schools simply because they live in the wrong zip code,” Sanders said.

Rep. Brian Evans, chairman of the House Education Committee, said in the first year students in schools rated “F” by the state, children of active duty military, low-income students, those in foster care and students with special needs would be given “the first priority” for school vouchers. In the second year, students who attend “D” rated schools would be phased in, and the third year would be open to every student in the state, Evans said.

The call for education savings accounts is the most controvers­ial part of Sanders’ education reform package, with critics arguing it would pull needed funds from struggling schools.

“While there are still many questions left to be answered, it’s clear that this aspect of the proposal will be incredibly detrimenta­l to our public school system,” said Olivia Gardner, education policy director for Arkansas Advocates for Children and Families. “Our public schools are economic pillars of our communitie­s, especially in rural parts of our state, and we should be focused on doing everything we can to build them up.”

With the GOP having super-majorities in the state Legislatur­e, the bill’s fate will come down to what Republican lawmakers decide. House Speaker Matthew Shepherd, R-El Dorado and Senate President Pro Tempore Bart Hester, R-Cave Springs, both said they support Sanders’ education plan.

“At the end of the day I believe this is something that will receive wide support, and it is something that ultimately makes the difference in countless Arkansans’ lives,” Shepherd said.

Democrats, who support increasing teacher salaries, have called for separating pay increases from a bill that would include education savings accounts, often referred to as “vouchers.”

“I am not sure what it says about the core part of your legislativ­e package that you have to pack it with all these goodies to make it tough to vote against it,” said Senate Democratic Leader Greg Leding of Fayettevil­le. “We still haven’t actually seen legislatio­n, so I still want some details. But I really feel like the voucher program is going to put a lot of public schools, particular­ly in rural communitie­s, at risk.”

It might not be just Democrats who are opposed to school choice. Rep. Keith Brooks, R-Little Rock, acknowledg­ed some Republican­s have reservatio­ns about education savings accounts, with families living in rural communitie­s having few choices of where to send their children.

OTHER ASPECTS

The bill will cost $300 million for the first year, with $150 million in new spending, Sanders said.

House Majority Leader Marcus Richmond of Harvey said there was “a general amount of excitement” within his caucus following the unveiling of the LEARNS initiative. While he acknowledg­ed the program would require significan­t funding, Richmond said the approach was needed to revamp Arkansas’ education system.

“I don’t think we’re any worse off spending it in a bunch right now to try and do a significan­t shake-up of how we’ve tried to educate our children,” he said. “Go ahead and spend some now, spend more than what we have been spending, because the trickle-down system that we’ve had hasn’t produced any results.”

Sanders also announced her proposal will include funding for 120 literacy coaches who will be deployed across the state to help boost the state’s literacy rates. Students in kindergart­en through third grade who are struggling to read at grade level will be given a $500 grant to hire tutors, Sanders said.

“I like it, because I always say we have go from kindergart­en through career, and this starts early to get kids better prepared to be part of that talent pipeline for the future,” said Senate Education Committee Chairman Jane English, R-North Little Rock.

“I like the pre-K,” she said. “I like more emphasis on literacy, and obviously I like career education, giving people an opportunit­y to have some skills when they leave high school. That’s big in my mind.”

The proposal also will include funding for crisis response and mental health awareness training for teachers to improve school security, according to a news release from the governor’s office. Sanders said the bill will include a provision banning critical race theory or “indoctrina­tion,” and a “dual diploma program” that will allow high school students to “choose a pathway” that better prepares them for a career.

 ?? Swofford) ?? Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders, surrounded by legislator­s, students, parents and teachers, announced details of her education plan on the steps outside the House Chambers in the State Capitol on Wednesday, Feb. 8, 2023. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Stephen
Swofford) Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders, surrounded by legislator­s, students, parents and teachers, announced details of her education plan on the steps outside the House Chambers in the State Capitol on Wednesday, Feb. 8, 2023. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Stephen

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