Current:Home > NewsKentucky House GOP budget differs with Democratic governor over how to award teacher pay raises -Triumph Financial Guides
Kentucky House GOP budget differs with Democratic governor over how to award teacher pay raises
View
Date:2025-04-15 18:48:20
FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) — Kentucky House Republicans on Tuesday unveiled spending bills aimed at boosting education funding and tapping into budget reserves to pump more money into public pensions and infrastructure projects.
The two-year budget plan introduced in the House doesn’t offer a guaranteed pay raise for teachers and other public school employees. Nor does it contain state funds to provide access to preschool for every 4-year-old in Kentucky. Both were cornerstones of Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear’s budget plan.
Instead, the House GOP budget proposal calls for a large infusion of additional money for the state’s main funding formula for K-12 schools — known as SEEK — and for student transportation. The House plan will include language suggesting “very strongly to administrators that their school personnel deserve and need pay raises,” Republican House Speaker David Osborne said.
“So we fully expect and anticipate that school administrators would reward their teachers accordingly,” Osborne told reporters.
Under the House plan, it would be up to local school districts to decide whether to use additional state funding to provide pay raises to teachers and other staff. Local administrators would decide the size of the raises as well. GOP lawmakers followed the same course two years ago and most districts followed through with raises, Republicans say.
Beshear proposed an 11% raise for teachers and all other public school employees. His plan also included $172 million each year of the budget to provide preschool for every Kentucky 4-year-old. He says the state’s low rankings in starting and average teacher pay hurt its ability to attract and retain educators.
“When I look at a problem — and our teacher salaries ... are a problem — I want to make sure any solution fixes it,” the governor said recently. “So if we truly want to fix it, then we have to do both an amount of money for teacher raises, that we require to go to teacher raises, but we also have to fully fund other parts of education.”
Top Republican lawmakers support helping the state’s struggling childcare sector. The House plan includes additional funding to maintain higher reimbursement for providers.
House Appropriations and Revenue Committee Chairman Jason Petrie introduced both bills on the 10th day of this year’s 60-day session. One bill would fund operations across much of state government during the next two years. The other would tap into the state’s vast budget reserves to make targeted, one-time investments in public pensions, infrastructure, public safety and economic development.
Work on the next two-year budget — the state’s signature policy document — will dominate the session. Once the House passes its plan, the Senate will put its imprint on spending policies. Negotiators from each chamber will ultimately hash out any differences. The GOP has supermajorities in both chambers.
The state’s main budget bill — House Bill 6 — also includes strategic investments in public safety, infrastructure and health services, top Republicans said.
“HB6 continues our commitment to investing in our commonwealth’s future while prioritizing responsible spending that aims to efficiently allocate resources while maintaining essential public services,” Petrie said. “This approach has served us well, allowing us to provide Kentuckians with necessary services while helping amass a historic amount in our budget reserve trust and addressing state debt and liabilities.”
The House GOP plan calls for providing another round of pay raises for state police troopers and hiring more social workers, as the governor also proposed.
For higher education, the House GOP bill includes $600 million over the two years for facility maintenance, renovations and repairs on campuses.
The other bill unveiled Tuesday, House Bill 1, would tap a portion of the state’s massive budget reserves to make one-time investments totaling more than $1.7 billion for infrastructure, public safety and economic development and to help pay down unfunded liabilities in public pension systems.
Portions of the money would go for drinking water and wastewater projects and to prepare sites for economic development projects. Both have been priorities for Beshear as well.
“We’ve made saving a priority and now the budget reserve trust fund exists to ensure our state is both prepared to take advantage of opportunities as well as provide for the state during difficult times,” Petrie said.
veryGood! (37334)
Related
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- Tamar Braxton Is Engaged to Queens Court Finalist Jeremy JR Robinson
- As battle for Sudan rages on, civilian deaths top 500
- Aly & AJ Explain Their Sacred Bond in Potentially the Sweetest Interview Ever
- Arkansas State Police probe death of woman found after officer
- U.S. tracking high-altitude balloon first spotted off Hawaii coast
- With federal rules unclear, some states carve their own path on cryptocurrencies
- Hairstylist Chris Appleton Confirms Romance With Lukas Gage
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- American climber dies on Mount Everest, expedition organizer says
Ranking
- Bodycam footage shows high
- What the latest U.S. military aid to Ukraine can tell us about the state of the war
- Follow James Harden’s Hosting Guide to Score Major Points With Your Guests
- Georgina Rodríguez Gets Emotional Recalling “Worst Moment” Losing Her and Cristiano Ronaldo’s Baby Boy
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Does Bitcoin have a grip on the economy?
- Death of Khader Adnan, hunger-striking Palestinian prisoner in Israel, sparks exchange of fire with Gaza Strip
- Transcript: Rep. Tony Gonzales on Face the Nation, April 30, 2023
Recommendation
Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
King Charles' coronation will draw protests. How popular are the royals, and do they have political power?
Zach Shallcross Reveals the Bachelor: Women Tell All Moment That Threw Him a “Curveball”
Astronomers detect Scary Barbie supermassive black hole ripping apart huge star in terrifying spaghettification event
Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
Aaron Taylor-Johnson's Shirtless Calvin Klein Ad Will Make You Blush
Katie Maloney Admits She Wasn't Shocked By Tom Sandoval and Raquel Leviss' Affair
Users beware: Apps are using a loophole in privacy law to track kids' phones