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Thursday, November 7, 2024

Reps. Takano, Schiff, Hayes, Larson, Sen. Booker Reintroduce Bicameral Legislation to Boost Teacher Compensation

Mark

Representative Mark Takano | Representative Mark Takano Official website

Representative Mark Takano | Representative Mark Takano Official website

Under the RAISE Act, educators would be eligible to claim up to $15,000 in new, refundable tax credits

 WASHINGTON, D.C. — Representatives Mark Takano (D-CA), Jahana Hayes (D-CT), John Larson (D-CT), and Adam Schiff (D-CA), and Senator Cory Booker (D-N.J.) reintroduced the bicameral Respect, Advancement, and Increasing Support for Educators (RAISE) Act, legislation that would boost teacher compensation by putting tax money back in their pockets and help diversify the teaching workforce. The bill would provide educators with a minimum of $1000 in refundable tax credits and as much as $15,000. 

Currently, public elementary and secondary teachers earn about 24 percent less than similarly educated professions. Based on a worldwide comparison, the average salary gap between teachers and others with comparable educational backgrounds is greater in the U.S. than in any other OECD country with available data. 

Early childhood educators fare far worse, with a national median wage of $11.65 an hour, well below the national living wage threshold. Even before the public health crisis, nearly every state in the nation reported shortages of teachers in high-need subjects like science, math, special education, and English language development. Students of color and students from families experiencing low-incomes are the least likely to have access to a stable educator workforce, with nearly 50 percent higher teacher turnover rates in high poverty schools and 70% higher teacher turnover rates in schools serving the largest concentrations of students of color. 

Through refundable tax credits, the RAISE Act will help boost the compensation of early childhood, elementary, and secondary school teachers. Depending on the level of poverty in the schools educators serve, public school teachers would be eligible for a tax credit up to $15,000. The bill would also double the educator tax deduction, which teachers can use to offset the cost of school supplies and expand eligibility to early childhood educators. 

 “As a former public school teacher for 24 years, I know what a tremendous impact educators have on the lives of their students,” said Representative Takano. “Teachers lay the foundation for a child’s education, and they didn’t waver from that responsibility even in the midst of a pandemic. They deserve to be paid for it. I’m proud to be introducing the RAISE Act with my colleagues to boost teacher salaries, reduce the teacher wage gap, and ensure a high-quality education for students of all ages. Together, we can support our teachers so they can continue inspiring our next generation of leaders and changemakers.” 

“Teachers play a crucial role in our children’s development and learning — yet many do not get paid a living wage. That must change, and the RAISE Act, which I introduced with Senator Booker today, will provide up to $15,000 in tax credits for educators, an important step towards fair compensation. I’ll continue to push for more equitable salaries and more support and resources for our teachers,” said Representative Schiff. 

“As a former public school teacher, I know how difficult it is to provide quality education while trying to make ends meet. This Teacher Appreciation Week, I am honored to join my colleagues to introduce the RAISE Act in support of our nation’s teachers,” said Representative Larson. “Increasing teacher pay will work to lessen the burden of financial stress and allow teachers and schools to focus on retaining and recruiting the next generation of educators. It is time to show teachers that their service and dedication to our nation’s young people is not forgotten. It is past time to pay teachers a living wage.”  

"Teachers are invaluable in shaping the minds and futures of our children, yet they are often undervalued and undercompensated,” said Senator Booker. “This bill will right this wrong by putting tax money back in teachers’ pockets and closing the wage gap. By providing refundable tax credits and increasing the educator tax deduction, we can uplift our educators and ensure they have the resources they need to provide a high-quality education for all students. I am proud to join my colleagues in introducing this legislation, and I will continue to champion efforts to support the teaching workforce." 

Specifically, the legislation would: 

  • Provide all eligible early childhood and K-12 educators with a $1000 refundable tax credit, regardless of the level of poverty in the school in which they teach. 
  • Create a refundable tax credit of up to $15,000 for eligible public elementary and secondary educators and for early childhood educators with a bachelor’s degree. 
  • Create a refundable tax credit of up to $10,000 for early childhood educators with an associate degree or a Child Development Associate (CDA) certificate. 
  • Encourage teacher recruitment and retention in under-resourced schools and communities most in need by utilizing a sliding scale for the tax credit, based on school and early education program poverty levels. 
  • Provide labor protections to prevent the tax credit from being used unfairly in labor negotiations. 
  • Increase the educator tax deduction from $250 to $500 to offset teachers’ purchases of school supplies and expand eligibility to early childhood educators.  
  • Provide at least $5.2 billion in annual mandatory funding for the Elementary and Secondary Education Act’s Title II (a nearly $3 billion increase), which supports educator recruitment, retention, professional development, and class size reduction, which can improve teaching and learning conditions. 
  • Create and fund a federal grant program to support and incentivize local educational agencies to increase teacher salaries, and provide related programs to strengthen, retain, and diversity the educator workforce. 
“The educator shortage is a crisis that calls for concerted action at the local, state and federal levels,” said NJEA President Sean. M. Spiller. “Sen. Booker’s RAISE Act is an important step toward making the profession more economically sustainable, which will incentivize promising students to enter the profession and encourage proven veterans to remain. Every dollar invested in public education is an investment in a more prosperous future for our country, and this is a particularly wise and well-targeted investment.” 

“The New Jersey PTA proudly supports the Raise Act Bill because we are proud of the “T” in PTA! This bill will help advance equitable salaries for all teachers who are our everyday education partners, and it will also help reduce the teacher wage gap. Teachers deserve respect and support for the hard work they demonstrate daily for our children and the school community. We also believe the Raise Act Bill will attract more qualified professionals into the teaching career so that all children will get the high-quality education they deserve,” said NJPTA Board Member Rose Acerra.  

The bill is co-sponsored by Representatives Sanford Bishop (D-GA), Jamaal Bowman (D-N.Y.), Andre Carson (D-IN), Mark DeSaulnier (D-CA), Lois Frankel (D-FL), Hank Johnson (D-GA), Derek Kilmer (D-WA), Summer Lee (D-PA), Lucy McBath (D-GA), Betty McCollum (D-MN), Grace Meng (D-N.Y.), Joe More

Original source can be found here.

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