[Vision2020] School Board gives nod to March levy; Voters will determine fate of proposed $1.97 million increase
Tom Hansen
thansen at moscow.com
Wed Dec 20 13:27:26 PST 2006
No-Clue could have said (but he didn't) -
Here's a topic that effects all of those who own property (or have children)
in Moscow.
--------
School Board gives nod to March levy; Voters will determine fate of
proposed $1.97 million increase
By Kate Baldwin, Daily News staff writer
Wednesday, December 20, 2006 - Page Updated at 12:03:10 PM
The Moscow School Board voted Tuesday to hold a March election to
increase the Moscow School District's supplemental levy by $1.97
million.
Superintendent Candis Donicht said the levy would enable the district
to return its fund balance to the recommended level of $1.6 million
while maintaining the current level of academic and extracurricular
programming.
"It will enable us to hold onto our reputation of excellence," she said.
The indefinite supplemental levy brings $5.6 million to the district
annually. The levy allows the district to maintain a number of features
that otherwise would be beyond the district's allotted state budget of
$13.3 million. These features include small class sizes, more electives
for students and additional certified specialists in areas ranging from
music to counseling.
If voters reject the levy, Donicht said the district will need to make
at least $400,000 worth of reductions per year.
Board member Julia McIlroy said the district needs to let voters know
how imminent these cuts will be.
Donicht said the election is scheduled for March 27 because the
district needs time to make its cuts for the fall if the levy doesn't
pass. The district's contracts and hirings will be affected in the
2007-2008 school year, she said.
The district's fund balance is a prescribed amount of money that needs
to be kept available to cover the district's expenditures, such as
salaries and operational costs, in the event of emergencies or other
unforeseen drops in revenues. The district's auditors recommend that
the fund balance be kept at $1.6 million, but drops in revenue since
2005 are estimated to reduce that amount to $800,000 at the end of June
2007.
Donicht said the $1.97 million increase ideally would support the
district for at least five years, but there is no "magic formula" to
guarantee that inflation and other changes in revenues will not affect
that time table. She said the request is based on the best projections
of the district and its auditors.
The district typically has needed increases to its levy every four to
seven years. The need for an increase comes from greater operating
costs due to inflation. The last increase came in April 2002, with an
increase of $1.1 million.
Board member Dawn Fazio said it's like "having a fixed salary."
Moscow voters approved the permanent and indefinite status of the levy
in 1992. The permanent status - which is also known as an
indefinite-term levy - means the district does not have to get annual
approval of the levy. However, if the district wants to increase the
amount of the levy, then a majority of voters must approve the
increase.
Business manager Sue Driskill called it "the nature of an indefinite
levy."
The district does not go to voters with a new levy request every year,
so when it does, the requested amount seems higher than the seemingly
smaller increases that are seen annually in other districts.
In closing the meeting, Fazio said "We have our work cut out for us."
Board member Margaret Dibble agreed.
"Yes, we do," she said.
______________________________
The MSD Spending Bloat
All those stories you hear about financial mismanagement at MSD are
true. MSD might make Enron look like a svelte, honest outfit.
According to the Idaho Office of Performance Evaluations, Overview of
School District Revenues and Expenditures, April 2003
(http://www2.state.id.us/ope/Reports/Rept0302.htm), the Moscow School
District is the most inefficient and spending-bloated school district
among its peers.
As detailed in the OPE Study, MSD has the highest Administrative
Spending, the highest Education Support Spending, and the highest
Non-Instructional Spending (all per pupil). It also has the highest
Transportation Spending per mile.
If it weren't for the gold-plated Blaine County School District, which
has a huge property tax base and the likes of Arnold Schwarzenegger,
John Kerry, and Teresa Heinz contributing huge property taxes, MSD
would also have the highest instructional spending and the highest
current total spending (per pupil).
It is worth noting that MSD ranks below the very top only in Operations
and Maintenance Spending per pupil. These include Building Care and
Building and Equipment Maintenance. Having skimped on this spending,
MSD now, surprise!, finds itself in need of new and upgraded
facilities, and wants to raise our taxes to make up for its past
mismanagement. Such irony.
All this is detailed in the table posted here:
http://moscowlevy.com/files/Spending_Bloat.htm
The bottom line is that MSD's spending-bloat is everywhere. It is no
surprise that MSD's school taxes are the highest among its peers, and
second and forth among Idaho's schools districts? Here are the tax
facts:
http://www.moscowlevy.com/files/Tax_Analysis_02-03.htm
SHOULDN'T MSD CUT OUT THE WASTE BEFORE ASKING FOR MORE?
Visit our website for this and other information-- www.MoscowLevy.com.
And don't forget to forward this e-mail to your friends, 'cause they
won't read it in the Daily News.
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