Utah voters will weigh a constitutional change in the Nov. 5 election that would provide more flexibility for the state budget through the use of revenue that has been allocated solely for specific funding purposes with K-12 public schools being the biggest beneficiaries.
Currently constitutionally earmarked personal income, corporate franchise, and intangible property tax revenue could flow to other spending in the triple-A-rated state under Amendment A, raising concerns about future education funding.
The Republican-controlled legislature placed the amendment on the ballot during the 2023 session. Utah Republican State Sen. Daniel McCay, who sponsored Senate Joint Resolution 10, said changing the earmark had been debated for years and the time has come
“Taking that income tax fund and using it exclusively for public education does create budgeting issues when there are large surpluses and other needs where we have deficiencies,” he said on the Senate floor in March 2023. “What this amendment will do is to protect and provide continued constitutional protections, but then allow for…revenue in the income tax fund to be used for other state purposes once we fulfilled our responsibilities for growth and for student enrollment and long-term inflation.”
In the wake of SJR10’s passage, House Democrats issued a statement calling it vague and raising concerns it will significantly harm the state’s investment in public education and make school funding “subject to the whims of political tides.”
Utah’s constitutional provision allocating income tax revenue and intangible property tax collections to K-12 public schools dates from 1931, when 75% of the money was earmarked for public education. In 1947, the earmark was raised to 100%. Higher education was added in 1997, followed by services for the disabled in 2021.
Revenue in the income tax fund totaled $8.8 billion in fiscal 2024,
Democratic State House Rep. Carol Moss, a former high school teacher, said Utah should have a dedicated revenue source for education and passage of the measure would open the door to the state’s many other funding needs.
“I’m optimistic that Utahns like their public schools enough to know that you can’t trust the legislators not to raid (the income tax fund) for any and everything,” she told The Bond Buyer on Friday. “We have huge needs in other areas, transportation, other things. I just don’t think that this guarantee is going to be sufficient and it’ll end eventually.”
Utah’s income tax revenue has grown faster than other taxes, including sales, in recent decades, according
“The proposed 2024 amendment would embed a K-12 public funding framework in the Utah Constitution and increase state budget flexibility, allowing the legislature to use income tax revenue for a broader range of state functions,” it said, adding the framework must be funded before the revenue is tapped for other purposes.
Utah is the only state that dedicates the entirety of one of its major taxes, with only Alabama coming close by earmarking the majority, but not all, of its income tax to education, according
“The (Utah) income tax earmark, enshrined in the constitution at a time when the tax mix looked radically different, is increasingly unbalanced and makes it difficult for legislators to budget,” Walczak wrote. “The income tax is, moreover, considerably more volatile than the sales tax, so using it as the source of education funding creates substantial uncertainty about year-to-year funding levels.”
Utah lawmakers have
While the Utah School Boards Association is not advocating for or against the amendment, the head of the Utah Education Association, which represents teachers, called it “another power grab by state politicians.”
“Amendment A would take funding from public schools to funnel to unaccountable, private religious school vouchers and politician pet projects,” the group’s president, Renee Pinkney, said in a statement. “There’s a good reason teachers, parents, Republicans, and Democrats stand strongly opposed to Amendment A.”
The teachers’ union is a plaintiff in a lawsuit filed in Salt Lake County District Court against Utah Gov. Spencer Cox and Attorney General Sean Reyes claiming the Utah Fits All Scholarship Program is unconstitutional.
The up to $8,000-per-student voucher program
The lawsuit contends the vouchers violate constitutional requirements by diverting income tax revenue to fund private schools that are not free, not open to all students, and not controlled and supervised by the State Board of Education.
Passage of Amendment A would allow two other bills enacted in 2023 to take effect, according to the Gardner Policy Institute’s report.
House Bill 394
HB 54 would end the state’s 1.75%
Proposed constitutional Amendment B, which resulted from the passage of
“Because of consistently strong investment returns, the fund needs to pay out more of its earnings today,” Utah Treasurer Marlo Oaks said in a May statement. “The proposed constitutional amendment will give the School and Institutional Trust Funds Office the flexibility to meet its fiduciary obligation to balance funding between current and future students.”