CMS board members challenge NC legislature to ‘do more', say teacher raises not enough
'What's happening right now in North Carolina is not just budget mismanagement,' CMS board member Melissa Easley said at a news conference Thursday. 'It's an attack on the very foundation of our public schools.'
The Senate introduced its 2025-27 budget proposal Monday night, and it passed Thursday. It includes an across-the-board raise for state employees of 1.25% in fiscal year 2025-26, along with a $3,000 bonus over two years. Teachers would receive an average 2.3% pay increase next school year and an average total increase of 3.3% over the next two years. They'd also get the $3,000 bonus.
The proposed 2.3% increase for this fiscal year falls short of the expected state increase CMS Superintendent Crystal Hill laid out in her budget proposal for the district, which assumed an increase of 3% from the state.
It's also a far cry from the budget recommendations Democratic Governor Josh Stein made in March, which included teacher pay raises of an average of 10.6% over two years. However, the governor's plan would require halting planned tax cuts, while Republicans in the Senate have emphasized cutting taxes for North Carolinians as a top priority.
CMS Board Chair Stephanie Sneed called out the increase as failing to keep up with inflation, which currently sits at 2.4%, down from 2.8% last month, according to data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Sneed and Easley both worry the state increase is not enough to keep NC teachers in the profession.
'Would you stay in a job where the pay increases a total of less than 5% over 3 years, while groceries, gas and rent keep rising?' Easley said Thursday. 'We are still watching qualified, passionate educators leave this profession because they cannot afford to stay.'
Pay increases for educators will vary based on years of experience. The proposed raises would increase monthly pay for beginning teachers by $50 and the most experienced teachers, with 25 years or more in NC schools, by $70.
Educators' salaries are based on a 10-month salary schedule, not a 12-month one. The new proposal would bring the yearly salary of a first-year teacher to $41,510, for example.
'Under this proposal, it's estimated that average teacher pay will be at $62,407,' Senate President Pro Tempore Phil Berger, R-Rockingham, said at a news conference Monday. 'On average, teachers will receive an additional compensation, with the step increases and the pay raise and the bonus, of 8.9% over the biennium.'
Easley argues the one-time $3,000 bonus is not enough to keep teachers.
'A one-time bonus is not a sustainable investment,' she said. 'What we need now is for the political will to stop treating our teachers like a line item and start treating them like the professionals they are.'
The proposal will now go to the NC House of Representatives, which will write and pass its own version. The House proposed higher raises for educators than the Senate during the last budget cycle in 2023.
Both Sneed and Easley called on the House to increase teacher pay raises in this budget, too.
'We must challenge our state legislators to do more,' Sneed said. 'We issue a challenge that money is allocated where the overwhelming majority of students are educated, which is our traditional public schools.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Boston Globe
5 minutes ago
- Boston Globe
Trump is fighting something in D.C., but it isn't crime
When the man says no, the agent continues. 'Yeah, Trump's got all federal agencies coming together, seven days, and going out trying to stop the violent crime, all kind of stuff,' the agent says. He continues: 'Smoking, drinking in public, right, it can't happen.' I'm a Detroit-born, Boston transplant at heart, but I've worked as a journalist in Washington for nearly two decades. Though I've built my career here working only for Get The Gavel A weekly SCOTUS explainer newsletter by columnist Kimberly Atkins Stohr. Enter Email Sign Up Understandably, I have some very strong and very personal views about the president's Advertisement Most obviously, sending armed federal agents and the National Guard to patrol the streets of the nation's capital bears all the hallmarks of a But from my local vantage point, I see even more layers to this dangerous gambit. Advertisement First, let's dispel the idea that Trump's effort is driven in any way by a true desire to make D.C. a better place to live and visit. Trump points to anecdotal evidence, like the If Trump really wanted to fight crime here, there are many things he could do that would actually help, starting with telling his fellow Republicans in Congress to release No, Trump's crime crusade is about something else. Aside from satisfying his Trump loves a shock-and-awe-style attack on perceived domestic enemies. Look at Trump's immigration crackdown, complete with images of suspected immigrants being detained and held in brutally inhumane facilities with nicknames like 'Alligator Alcatraz.' It's a show put on by the former reality show host and the latest episode is brought to you from Democratic-controlled cities he has long railed against. Crime fighting isn't the point. Cruelty is. Advertisement It's gut wrenching to see it happening in a place so filled with history, culture, and joy. It's a richness that comes not just from transplants like me or its world-renown cultural institutions (which are They, and I, want safe, well-policed, and well-resourced communities. Not a federal takeover. And I'm exhausted by the crime hot takes from people who couldn't identify Ironically, even if you thought soldiers should be sent here, they are also being sent from Ohio, the only state that Even Trump's claim that Advertisement Trump is selling a dangerous lie about the city I've made a life in. My D.C. is one of Kimberly Atkins Stohr is a columnist for the Globe. She may be reached at

Washington Post
6 minutes ago
- Washington Post
Texas Capitol evacuated after shooting threat citing ‘political situation'
The Texas Capitol was evacuated late Tuesday in response to a shooting threat that forced people — including those protesting a Republican order for police to escort Democratic lawmakers to their homes — to leave the building.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Warren County Republicans vie for Ohio Senate seat
The race to represent a Warren County seat in the Ohio Senate is heating up, as two Republican candidates have already announced their campaigns for a May 2026 primary. Sen. Steve Wilson currently represents District 7 but term limits prevent him from running again. The district includes Warren County and northern parts of Hamilton County. It has a 60% Republican lean and a population of about 366,000, according to analysis by Dave's Redistricting, which uses recent election results data to predict partisan split of electoral districts. It's not clear who else, Republican or Democrat, may run for the seat as it's too early to see who has pulled petitions for 2026 local elections. Who is Zac Haines? Symmes Township resident Zac Haines has announced his campaign to represent the 7th District. Haines is a Miami University trustee and CEO of DPA Buying Group, a marketing agency in Blue Ash. He was nominated by President Trump to be a trustee for the Harry S. Truman Scholarship Foundation. He's been endorsed for the seat by U.S. Rep. Warren Davidson, a Republican from Troy, along with Ohio Treasurer Robert Sprague, according a campaign news release. 'My goal is to make Ohio the best and most competitive state in the country,' Haines said in the release. Who is Scott Lipps? Scott Lipps, who previously represented Warren County in the Ohio House, has also pulled petitions to run for the Senate seat. Lipps last won reelection for the eastern Warren County House seat in 2022 with 75% of the vote. Term limits prevented him from running for the Ohio House again. Lipps has also served as Franklin mayor and city council member. He owns Sleep Tite Mattress Factory and Showroom in Franklin. Lipps said in a news release that he spent his time at the statehouse advocating for Second Amendment rights and for the rights of the elderly and those with disabilities. "It was an honor to represent Warren County and southwestern Ohio at the Statehouse. I am proud of my conservative record," Lipps said in the release. Regional politics reporter Erin Glynn can be reached at eglynn@ @ee_glynn on X or @eringlynn on Bluesky. This article originally appeared on Cincinnati Enquirer: Warren County primary: meet the Republican candidates Solve the daily Crossword