IndianaLocalNews

How the Indiana budget came together with an increase for teacher pay

One of the biggest items in the new state budget came together in just six days: a big increase ticketed for teacher pay.

The House and Senate budgets were both in the neighborhood of a 400-million-dollar funding boost for schools, and neither said anything about teacher pay specifically — Republicans shot down Democratic amendments attempting to add it.

But House Speaker Todd Huston (R-Fishers) says House and Senate leaders and Governor Holcomb discussed teacher pay behind the scenes throughout the session, and were well aware of a December report from Holcomb’s commission on teacher pay, which calculated it would take 600-million dollars to make Indiana salaries competitive with surrounding states. When it became clear an updated economic forecast would add a flood of projected revenue to work with — an additional two-billion dollars — Senate President Pro Tem Rod Bray (R-Martinsville) says budget negotiators already knew what items were next on the priority list, and the 600-million for teachers was one of the first to be added.

The budget includes not only money for raises, but a step Republicans have long resisted: an order to school boards to spend at least 45-percent of their funding on teachers. It doesn’t require a minimum salary, but schools paying less than 40-thousand dollars a year have to explain to the Department of Education in writing.

Related posts

Guatemala man arrested for OWI has ties to officer’s electrocution death

Jon Zimney

Indiana rape crisis center opens to reduce assault cases, heighten attention

Terri Dee/Indiana News Service

Deadline extended to apply for Indiana State Police 86th Recruit Academy

95.3 MNC

Leave a Comment