Ducey: Schools must end virtual classrooms or lose money
Bob Christie | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 3 years, 10 months AGO
PHOENIX (AP) — Schools that have shuttered because of the coronavirus must end virtual learning or lose funding, Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey said Monday in his annual state-of-the-state address that doubled down on his light-touch approach to managing the pandemic.
The Republican governor celebrated the limited impact his approach has had on businesses and took aim at schools that have kept students at home to protect them and their teachers.
“We will not be funding empty seats or allowing schools to remain in a perpetual state of closure,” Ducey said. “Children still need to learn, even in a pandemic.”
Ducey's aides did not immediately respond to requests for more information about when schools will be expected to end virtual learning.
He has refused pressure from Superintendent of Public Instruction Kathy Hoffman, a Democrat, to pause in-person learning amid a rise in coronavirus infections that is crushing hospitals. But Monday's speech was the most aggressive he has delivered in pushing for schools to fully reopen their doors.
In his seventh and shortest state-of-the-state address as governor, Ducey spoke directly to a single camera from his office in the state Capitol.
The pandemic-era precaution came in place of the traditional pomp and circumstance of a speech that is normally delivered to a joint session of the Legislature, Supreme Court justices, state agency heads and foreign consuls.
Ducey called for more money to help children falling behind because they have been away from their classrooms, a problem he said has affected particularly low-income students and children of color. Resources could include funding for summer school, longer school days and one-on-one tutoring.
Ducey's 22-minute speech focused almost entirely on the pandemic. He acknowledged pressure to take a tougher or lighter response. Public health officials and hospital leaders have pleaded in vain for Ducey to close bars and restaurants, impose a curfew or take other actions to limit interactions between people.
“If we’re really all in this together, then we have to appreciate that for many families “lockdown” doesn’t spell inconvenience; it spells catastrophe,” Ducey said.
Meanwhile, some of Ducey's fellow Republicans are pushing to end the public health emergency that has expanded the governor’s power to impose restrictions on businesses and individuals and opened access to federal funding.
A resolution to end the emergency with a majority vote in the Legislature, which would not require Ducey's signature, could be among the first items that lawmakers address this year.
Ducey said he would fight that effort, if only to prevent cities from imposing their own restrictions.
“I’m not going to hand over the keys to a small group of mayors who have expressed every intention of locking down their cities.” Ducey said.
Following early fears that the pandemic would cause an economic calamity and strain the state budget, Arizona's finances have been relatively unscathed, with a nearly $1 billion rainy day fund intact and a large projected state budget surplus. Ducey called for tax cuts, a move minority Democrats and school-funding advocates are sure to fiercely oppose.
“I propose, in this session, we work together to reform and lower taxes and preserve Arizona’s good name as a responsible, competitive state,” Ducey said.
During his first campaign Ducey pledged to cut taxes every year in office. Years of tax cuts starved schools of money coming out of the Great Recession, leading to teacher walkouts in 2018 and a promise from Ducey and lawmakers to increase teacher salaries.
Voters last year overwhelmingly approved an income tax hike on wealthy taxpayers to boost school funding, a measure that infuriated Ducey's allies in the business community.
The governor spoke shortly after newly elected lawmakers were sworn in and began the 2021 legislative session amid unprecedented security measures around the Capitol.
In the wake of mob violence by insurrectionist backers of President Donald Trump who broke into Congress last week in Washington, D.C, and new threats of further violence at statehouses, the entire state Capitol complex is now ringed by a double-layer of fencing.
The general public was not allowed into the Senate or House or into the plaza between the two buildings and only a limited number of invited guests were on hand.
Rep. Rusty Bowers of Mesa was chosen for a second term as House speaker, overcoming a threat by several of his fellow Republicans to vote against him over anger that he refused to back President Donald Trump's unfounded claims that he won Arizona's electoral votes.
Republican Karen Fann of Prescott will serve a second term as Senate president.
Republicans hold a one-seat majority in both the House and Senate.
ARTICLES BY JONATHAN J. COOPER
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