Andrada High School biology and chemistry teacher Lisa Daconta encourages westbound motorists on Congress at Granada to honk in support of the 1,500 or so teachers, parents and supporters at the rally and march for the #RedforEd movement, Wednesday, April 4, 2018, Tucson, Ariz.

PHOENIX — Calling the governor's plan not sustainable, the Arizona PTA has withdrawn its backing for Gov. Doug Ducey's teacher pay hike plan.

Beth Simek, the organization's president, told Capitol Media Services this afternoon that said her own research showed her that there is no way Ducey can finance both the raises and restore capital funding without cutting other needed programs. And Simek said she believes some of what the governor plans to slice could end up hurting the very children her organization is working to protect.

The change of heart comes just two days after Simek stood with the Arizona School Boards Association and some other school groups to give their blessing to Ducey's proposal.

Potentially more significant, one purpose of that news conference was to convince teachers to vote against a strike. And her new decision comes even as teachers are voting through today on whether to walk out.

And her message to teachers now?

"If they feel like they cannot afford in their personal financial household to walk out, then they should follow their heart,'' Simek said. "If they feel they can afford this, or that it's something they feel morally strongly about, then they should follow their heart and walk out.''

Simek said that she was not given all the relevant information about how Ducey planned to finance his plan when the governor first asked to sign on in support. So what she did was strike out on her own and gather as much in specifics as she could from various other sources, including other state agencies.

Most crucial, she said, are cuts being made elsewhere in the budget.

For example, Simek said, Ducey's plan cuts $2.9 million that had been allocated for skilled nursing services in both the state Medicaid program and the Department of Economic Security. Also gone is $1.8 million aid for "critical access hospitals'' and $4 million that the governor had proposed in additional dollars for developmentally disabled.

"We can't support that,'' Simek said. "That hurts kids and it hurts families.''

Gubernatorial press aide Daniel Scarpinato said nothing in the plan actually reduces existing funds. Instead, he said, this is simply Ducey deciding not to add money to these programs.

Simek, for her part, said she's not convinced that deciding not to added those dollars — funding that originally had been proposed as necessary — will not harm children.

Simek said none of this was disclosed to her when she was asked to support Ducey's plan.


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