Education: Officials optimistic about budget plan
This is an archived article that was published on sltrib.com in 2007, and information in the article may be outdated. It is provided only for personal research purposes and may not be reprinted.

Lawmakers' public school budget priorities released Monday are generous to teachers and students alike.

Although the final budget won't be approved for weeks, education officials are optimistic. The schools budget recommended by the Public Education budget committee totals more than $385 million in ongoing and one-time funds.

"This is as good as I've seen in five sessions," said Patti Harrington, state schools superintendent.

The budget recommendations include an 8.4 percent hike in the money schools would receive on a per-pupil basis, with more than half the increase in the form of salary boosts for teachers. Lawmakers recommend a $2,000 shift in the salary schedule, a one-time $1,000 bonus for all classroom teachers and $30 million for a professional excellence program that would bolster pay for certain teachers.

Sen. Howard Stephenson, R-Draper, said significant education funding increases are more palatable to conservatives when they come in the form of targeted programs such as differential pay for teachers and technology in the classroom.

Stephenson has championed "21st century" learning initiatives that would mainstream instructional computer programs and put more computers in classrooms. The committee honored requests from Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr. and Harrington's office for $22 million in ongoing money for such programs, then added another $50 million in one-time funds for computers in schools.

The Legislature's Executive Appropriations Committee now will consider the funding requests in light of state revenue numbers due next week.

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