Voters in November will decide whether to send more money to education through an income tax on the state’s highest earners.
Mitchella Stevens, a teacher at Cartwright Elementary School, looks on as 435,669 signatures for the InvestInEd ballot initiative are turned in at the Arizona Secretary of State’s Office at the state Capitol in Phoenix on July 2, 2020. The 435,669 signatures are well over the required amount to get the initiative on the ballot in the 2020 general election, which would raise more than $900 million a year for Arizona public K-12 education if approved by voters.
Mitchella Stevens, a teacher at Cartwright Elementary School, carries a box containing some of the 435,669 signatures for the InvestInEd ballot initiative that were turned in at the Arizona Secretary of State’s Office at the state Capitol in Phoenix on July 2, 2020. The 435,669 signatures are well over