From Deseret News archives:

Teachers might get more money

Published: Friday, Feb. 29, 2008 12:18 a.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
Teachers might get even more money now that a potential budget showdown appears to be settling.

House and Senate GOP leaders and Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr. are hashing out plans to boost the state's basic per-student funding formula — the weighted pupil unit (WPU) — by an extra 1 percent. That would amount to about $25 million.

But it's not a straight-up increase because even though the money is funding the WPU, it is only one-time funding. Traditionally, the WPU funding is considering to be ongoing that legislators would build on next year.

"Those are details, frankly, we are working on," Senate President John Valentine, R-Orem, said Thursday. "We've negotiated with the governor, and we're pretty close on some additional compensation for teachers, and we are working on a (funding) source that we do not yet have fully firmed up."

Funding education has been a priority for legislators and the governor, even after reduced revenue estimates came in last week.

"We have always had a very strong interest in putting as much money as possible into education," he said. What we needed was a source; we think we found one."

Story continues below
Valentine said details of the plan would be firmed up in GOP caucuses in the next day or two. But he did acknowledge that "bonuses were discussed."

Earlier Thursday, Valentine said finding the extra money for teachers was the one major area of disagreement remaining this session between majority Republicans and the GOP governor.

Huntsman told the Deseret Morning News he believed there was a way to increase teacher salaries even more than the 2.5 percent increase in the WPU and the $1,700 teacher raise already approved by the Executive Appropriations Committee.

"Given what I think we can do, I'm not yet content with that final number," said the governor, who had sought a 7 percent increase in the WPU in his budget. "I want to get compensation as high as we can get it."

The Public Education Appropriations Subcommittee had prioritized less than Huntsman wanted, a 3 percent WPU hike and a $2,500 straight-up raise for teachers — the equivalent of about a 6.6 percent WPU increase. But that was reduced after new revenue estimates came in $340 million short of projections, even though they were still among the heftiest ever recorded.

Huntsman said he was willing to consider either the one-time WPU increase or a one-time teacher bonus. "I want to get it in a way that maximizes teacher compensation," he said.

Recent comments

That was one of my greatest concerns before I started teaching......

Science Teacher | March 2, 2008 at 8:39 p.m.

I have worked in the private sector and as a public teacher and...

Internet surfing at work | March 2, 2008 at 11:16 a.m.

Please don't pay ME more. Pay us all more. I do not want to work in...

Science Teacher | March 1, 2008 at 11:05 p.m.

Image
Jeffrey D. Allred, Deseret Morning News

A member of the Head Start program walks past some of the 100 pairs of children's shoes Thursday at the Capitol in Salt Lake City.

previousnext

Latest comments

Religion in politics is tiresome

@ S. Reno, Are you saying that abortion is not a religious issue? When...

I don't remember any Utes chasing George. The only Utes in the picture...

2 citations issued at Y.-U. game

MY experience is just the opposite. I have been insulted and mistreated in...

Nutty Putty Cave will close

Adult thinking: The man who died in the nutty putty cave deserves respect...

BYU says Hall incident resolved

Mendenhall and Whittingham need to take a stand and cool this thing down....

No to the bridge! Thanks, Utah Valley Sierra Forum, for your forward...

I cant believe South Sevier is not in the top 20. This is crazy. they took...

All I hear is my team this, my guys that, but continue to see consistently...

Letters: Hatred is uncalled for

possibly be because you LOST could it? If you had won, everyone would just...

Juan Diego was not runner up last year, Logan was.

Advertisements