San Francisco Chronicle

Teachers rally prior to vote on pay increase

- By Melissa Daniels and Bob Christie Melissa Daniels and Bob Christie are Associated Press writers.

PHOENIX — Striking Arizona teachers who won a big pay increase but came up substantia­lly short of achieving their demands for more school funding flooded the Arizona Capitol for a fifth day Wednesday hoping it will be the last they are out of their classrooms.

The Republican-controlled Legislatur­e was considerin­g a state budget that promises the first installmen­t of a 20 percent pay increase by 2020 and a partial restoratio­n of cuts to education funding, but many teachers said if the lawmakers failed to act Wednesday, they would not go back to work.

A day full of delays led strike organizers to ask teachers to return Thursday, and some school districts that had planned to re-open canceled classes. The House and Senate planned late-night debates on the budget package.

Teachers didn’t get everything they wanted, but believe they made major inroads. They had sought an immediate 20 percent pay raise, competitiv­e pay for support profession­als, guaranteed annual raises, funding returned to 2008 levels and no new tax cuts until Arizona reaches the national per-pupil funding average.

“We here in Arizona have banded together as educators, we’ve set up a grass-roots movement with 1,700 schools involved, 1,700 liaisons, and if we’re ever called to come back we will come back together and we’ll come back stronger,” middle school teacher Scott Gebbie said.

He was among thousands of #RedforEd movement educators at the Capitol on Wednesday.

The tentative budget deal between legislativ­e leaders and Republican Gov. Doug Ducey is a major victory for teachers, who were offered only a 1-percent raise in the governor’s initial budget proposal. The offer set for debate and likely passage by late Wednesday remains substantia­lly unchanged from the one announced two weeks before teachers walked out last Thursday.

Lawmakers did tweak it with changes to the rosy economic projection­s Ducey relied on to make funding more sustainabl­e. And a top Republican lawmaker gave teachers credit for keeping the pressure on.

“I think that they had a promise from us that we were going to do something,” House Majority Leader John Allen said. “Our track record of delivering that promise has not always been perfect, so I don’t think they wasted their time.”

Ducey, who is seeking re-election and faced the wrath of teachers for pushing tax cuts while the state’s teacher pay and school funding remains among the lowest in the nation, also will likely declare victory. The Republican Governors Associatio­n is already running ads touting Ducey as providing major new school funding “without raising taxes.”

The grass-roots group called Arizona Educators United that called the strike was created in early March as a wave of teacher protests over low pay and school funding swept across the nation. From its beginnings in West Virginia, it spread to Oklahoma, Kentucky, Arizona and most recently Colorado.

 ?? Ross D. Franklin / Associated Press ?? Arizona teacher Taylor Dutro listens to protest speakers at the state capitol in Phoenix.
Ross D. Franklin / Associated Press Arizona teacher Taylor Dutro listens to protest speakers at the state capitol in Phoenix.

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