The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

State House OKs raises for teachers, others

Education, mental health programs also will get more money.

- By James Salzer James.Salzer@ajc.com

The Georgia House on Thursday overwhelmi­ngly backed 4% raises for many state workers and more money for law enforcemen­t, education and mental health programs.

The raises are included in the spending plan for fiscal 2025 — which begins July 1 — that the House approved 172-1.

It came a week after Gov. Brian Kemp signed a midyear budget that includes $5.5 billion in extra money for things such as massive renovation­s on Capitol Hill, a new medical school at the University of Georgia, a new prison, and miles and miles of roads.

The midyear budget runs through June 30.

The fiscal 2025 budget now goes to the Senate for its considerat­ion.

State tax collection­s have been slow for the past year, but the state is sitting on $16 billion in “rainy day” and undesignat­ed reserves, so Kemp and lawmakers have backed higher spending since the session began in January.

The state spent about $26.6 billion — excluding federal funding — in fiscal 2020, the last budget plan approved before the COVID19 pandemic hit. Last year, it was more than $32 billion. The midyear plan Kemp just signed boosted state spending to nearly $38 billion. Of that, $2 billion would come out of “undesignat­ed” reserves.

All that matters because the money the state collects in taxes helps pay for K-12 schools, colleges, public health care, prisons, policing, business regulation, roads and a host of other services.

Under the Kemp budget plan endorsed by House leaders, state law enforcemen­t employees would receive $3,000 raises, on top of the $6,000 increases approved last session. Child protection and placement services caseworker­s in the Division of Family and Children Services would also receive $3,000 raises.

Other rank-and-file workers would receive 4% increases — up to about the first $70,000 in salary — and teachers would get $2,500 more.

Lawmakers have backed raises in recent years to improve high turnover rates in state agencies.

“The slow and steady increases in state salaries — both across the board and targeted — are moving the needle on state employee recruitmen­t and retention,” said House Appropriat­ions Chairman Matt Hatchett, R-Dublin.

Hatchett told colleagues the new starting salary for prison guards — under the budget — would be almost $45,000 a year, and new state troopers would receive $64,000. The House included an extra $15 million to improve the pay of assistant district attorneys. Hatchett said the starting pay for prosecutor­s would go from $58,000 to $71,000.

In addition, the House backed half of the spending needed for a judiciary-backed proposal to greatly increase the salaries of the state’s top judges.

The spending plan includes more than $200 million extra to pay for transporti­ng children to school, something local officials have requested for years, and $104 million would go to schools for security upgrades.

The House backed hundreds of millions more for Medicaid, the state-federal health care program for the poor and disabled, including to increase payments to nursing home operators and other providers.

 ?? ARVIN TEMKAR/ARVIN.TEMKAR@AJC.COM ?? House Appropriat­ions Chair Matt Hatchett said raises “are moving the needle on state employee recruitmen­t and retention.”
ARVIN TEMKAR/ARVIN.TEMKAR@AJC.COM House Appropriat­ions Chair Matt Hatchett said raises “are moving the needle on state employee recruitmen­t and retention.”

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