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Texas House Approves Major School Finance Reform Package, Adds Teacher Raises To The Bill

Emree Weaver
/
The Texas Tribune
Houston state Rep. Dan Huberty, chairman of the House Public Education Committee, speaks with colleagues during deliberation of the House school finance bill.

After more than three hours of discussion, the Texas House nearly unanimously passed a comprehensive bill to reform the way schools are funded and slow the growth of property tax bills.

House Bill 3 would increase base funding for each student by $890, fund full-day pre-K for low-income 4-year-olds in most school districts, compress tax rates for all districts and reduce the amount of money wealthier districts pay the state in recapture payments to shore up poorer districts. Because Democrats spearheaded a change in the bill, it would also provide across-the-board raises for all full-time school employees who are not administrators.

“We are finally reforming public education in Texas, and not by court order, so that’s a pretty important thing,” said the bill’s author, Rep. Dan Huberty, a Republican who chairs the House Public Education Committee. The vast majority of House lawmakers signed on to the bill as co-authors. Rep. Jonathan Stickland, R-Bedford, was the lone no vote.

The bill will now make its way to the Senate. The upper chamber last week increased the amount it had planned to set aside for public education and property tax reform to match the House’s original proposal. While House leaders have pitched a single comprehensive school finance bill and edited it over time, the Senate has taken a more winding path to legislating on this issue.

One key sticking point between the two chambers: teacher pay. The Senate has approved a bill proposing $5,000 across-the-board raises for Texas teachers. The House has advocated for more flexibility for school districts in teacher salaries, but the bill was amended Wednesday to give all school employees pay raises of about $1,850, on average.

As originally proposed by Huberty, HB 3 would put $6.3 billion into public education and $2.7 billion toward slowing the growth of school district property taxes. It is unclear exactly what the new cost of the bill is, with the amendments passed.

Debate on the floor was largely civil and lacked a lot of the drama that usually accompanies business on such large pieces of legislation. Rep. Matt Schaefer, R-Tyler, a member of the hardline conservative faction of the House, needled Huberty on the floor over how exactly HB 3 would ensure tax bills wouldn’t balloon in the future, even while property values continue to skyrocket.

“There is real property tax relief in this bill, but my point is that I don't see how it doesn't get washed out very quickly,” Schaefer said.

Schaefer joined the vast majority of members in approving the bill Wednesday.

Many House lawmakers withdrew their amendments, including a couple of controversial ones to reduce funding for some charter schools and add a state-funded merit pay program.

Republican Gov. Greg Abbott applauded the bill's progress, saying it was a vital step toward the goal of meaningful reform.

"The Legislature is making changes that will have a lasting impact on our education system, and more importantly, our students," he said in a statement.

The most notable amendment Wednesday was the teacher pay raise provision filed by House Democratic Caucus Chair Chris Turner, D-Grand Prairie. It would require school districts to use some of the extra money they receive in the bill to give the pay raises. It appears to serve as an attempt to compromise on an issue that quickly became a fault line between the House and Senate on how to spend money on schools.

Until Wednesday, Republican House Speaker Dennis Bonnen has said he would prefer to give school districts flexibility on how to use additional funding and that he does not favor a key Senate proposal for $5,000 teacher pay raises.

"This is a sustainable way of providing increased compensation to our teachers and other employees," Turner said Wednesday afternoon, explaining his amendment to his peers in the House. "It establishes a floor, but it requires every school district to spend at least 25 percent of its basic allotment increase on pay raises. They can go beyond that if they wish to."

Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, the Republican president of the Senate, has prioritized $5,000 across-the-board teacher pay raises over other measures to improve school finance. Since his January inauguration, he has championed legislation that would provide such raises. That $4 billion piece of legislation, Senate Bill 3, passed unanimously out of the Senate last month.

On Wednesday, Patrick's office praised the House for adding mandatory teacher pay raises to the bill.

"The lieutenant governor believes that aside from a parent, nothing has more impact on the success of a child than a teacher — and he appreciates that the House has taken a first step toward an across-the-board pay raise," said Alejandro Garcia, a Patrick spokesman.

Turner's amendment would not add to the cost of HB 3, but rather would mandate school districts to use a quarter of the additional funding they receive to provide raises for school district employees who are not administrators — with the majority going to across-the-board raises for full-time employees and the rest going to discretionary raises. This provision would apply any time the Legislature raises the base funding per student in the future.

The raises backed by the House would also go to support staff, costing about $2.4 billion, according to Turner's office. The Senate's proposed raises would be for teachers and librarians only.

Rep. Richard Peña Raymond, D-Laredo, had planned to propose a provision similar to the Senate's that would give full-time teachers, librarians, counselors and nurses $5,000 pay raises. But he chose to pull it down and publicly support Turner's amendment instead.

The Senate Finance Committee voted out a version of its budget Wednesday that also includes $2.3 billion for school finance reform — but the Senate does not have a clear plan outlined for how to deliver that money to schools. It also includes $2.7 billion for property tax relief, but it's still unclear how the upper chamber's proposal would apply, if at all, to school districts.

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From The Texas Tribune

Aliyya Swaby started as the Texas Tribune's public education reporter in October 2016. She came to the Tribune from the hyperlocal nonprofit New Haven Independent, where she covered education, zoning and transit for two years. After graduating from Yale University in 2013, she spent a year freelance reporting in Panama on social issues affecting black Panamanian communities. A native New Yorker, Aliyya misses public transportation but is thrilled by the lack of snow.
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