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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Luna urges 3 percent more for schools

Luna

BOISE – A humbled Idaho schools Superintendent Tom Luna told state lawmakers Thursday that regardless of how it’s done, he wants Idaho to keep investing in teacher pay and classroom technology.

Luna, whose ambitious “Students Come First” school reform laws were roundly rejected by voters in November, including plans to supply every Idaho high school student with a laptop computer, said he’s OK with the money being spent differently – but he wants it spent on schools.

“We made tremendous progress on getting moneys for technology and for teacher compensation through the legislation that was passed in 2011,” Luna said. “Now, I understand that for any number of reasons, those laws were overturned. But I don’t think anybody voted against those laws because they wanted us to spend less money on education this year or any year going forward.”

Luna called for a 3 percent increase in state funding for schools in Idaho next year, exceeding the 2 percent increase already backed by Gov. Butch Otter. And he staked out a strong position against a raid on the school budget to take away the reform funds, including the money for the laptops, and shift it to other uses like a tax cut for Idaho businesses.

Luna, like Otter, called for setting aside $33.9 million in next year’s public school budget to cover recommendations that might be made by Otter’s stakeholder task force. Without that money, he noted, his proposed budget is virtually flat from this year’s level.

Luna said Idaho needs to increase teacher pay, but he didn’t propose a pay hike for teachers next year, other than restoring the 1.67 percent cut in teacher salary funds from the “Students Come First” laws and a $500 boost to Idaho’s minimum teacher salary to $31,000 a year. That minimum peaked at $31,750 in 2008-’09, so the boost still wouldn’t bring it back up to that level.

Luna suggested that some type of merit pay or “differential compensation” for teachers still could be considered by the stakeholder group. Whatever that plan may be, it’ll be different than the merit-pay bonus plan voters repealed, Luna said. “I’m comfortable with that,” he said. “I’m comfortable working with the members of the task force and the Legislature … so that we can work together to make sure every penny continues to go to educators.”

Luna’s overall budget proposal for next year still would put the state below its school funding level in 2009.

“So many agencies, many areas of government are operating on considerably less than we had in 2009, and schools are no different,” he said. “I’m very pleased that we’re looking at an increase in the amount of money that we’ll be spending on public schools in Idaho.”

Luna is proposing $1.31 billion in state general funds for schools next year, a 3 percent increase from this year; and $1.6 billion in total funds, a 2.6 percent increase from this year.