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Alabama Senate passes largest education budget in state history — ‘Our students deserve the best’

MONTGOMERY — The Alabama Senate on Thursday afternoon unanimously passed a $7.67 billion Education Trust Fund budget for fiscal year 2022, the largest education budget in state history.

The budget bill, SB 189, is sponsored by Sen. Arthur Orr (R-Decatur), the chairman of the Committee on Finance and Taxation Education. The legislation was approved unanimously by the committee on Tuesday. The Senate passed the bill as substituted by the committee and then as amended once on the floor.

Several other bills that comprise the rest of the education budget package also passed the upper chamber on Thursday.

All together, the Senate-approved education budget addresses several important priorities, including the following:

Provides funding for Governor Kay Ivey’s recommended 2% across the board pay raise for public education employees, including teachers, support staff and transportation workers;

Confronts the significant shortage of credentialed math and science teachers across the state by creating a new salary matrix to recruit and retain these essential educators;

Supplies funding for step raises – at least 2% – for all teachers;

Establishes a compensation commission to make sure Alabama educators’ total compensation (retirement, health benefits and salary) is competitive with the southeast peer group – particularly contiguous states;

Funds the school nurse program to ensure there is a nurse in every school system;

And sets up a retiree trust fund to present teachers with bonuses.

“The budget passed today in the Senate provides a substantial amount of funding that will allow us to address several critical educational needs across the state, the most noteworthy of these being the crying demand for certified math and science teachers,” stated Orr. “There are around 7,500 secondary level positions for math and science teachers statewide, and only 4,300 of those are filled with properly certified individuals. Our students deserve the best education we can possibly provide them, and that certainly requires recruiting credentialed teachers.”

“Over $200 million is being allocated toward salary increases,” he continued. “Additionally, substantial step raise increases are being provided for educators in order to retain these individuals in their midyears. Our greatest priority right now is to attract and keep quality educators. If we want to be competitive with our neighboring states, particularly in STEM related education, we must ensure we are adequately rewarding our teachers, which ultimately betters the state collectively.”

Sen. Donnie Chesteen (R-Geneva) sponsored the bills regarding incentives for STEM teachers and the retiree trust fund. Supplemental education appropriations bills were also passed, including the funding mechanisms for Talladega College, Tuskegee University and Lyman Ward Military School.

Senate Pro Tem Greg Reed (R-Jasper) applauded the package’s passage.

“We have a shortage of educators in Alabama, and that shortage is growing,” he commented in a statement. “This bill makes significant strides toward reducing that shortage by providing significant support to teachers to incentivize them to live and teach in Alabama. These incentives include across the board pay raises for educators and a new salary structure to help attract and retain certified STEM teachers in Alabama.”

Reed concluded, “I would like to thank Senator Orr for his hard work on this budget, and I congratulate him on bringing this critical support to students and faculty across our state.”

Reed also told reporters that it is a testament to the success of conservative fiscal policies that the Senate is able to pass the state’s largest-ever education budget even coming out of a pandemic.

The education budget package now moves to the House. Thursday was the 16th day of the 2021 regular session. Next week is the legislative spring break.

Sean Ross is the editor of Yellowhammer News. You can follow him on Twitter @sean_yhn

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