Board approves 14 percent levy hike
By Jana Peterson, The Pine Journal, Cloquet, Minn. | |
McClatchy-Tribune Information Services |
"If you set it at something (a number) other than the maximum and something changes to that amount later, you'd have to come back before
A year ago, the Board proposed a 16.2 percent levy increase in September, and voted for a 15.2 percent increase in December.
Josephson said no.
"A 14 percent increase of our levy from one year to the next doesn't translate into a 14 percent increase of property taxes," the business manager said, clarifying that as the tax base of the community grows, it can absorb a levy increase of perhaps 3 to 5 percent.
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"The
The bulk of the increase would go to the district's General Fund, Josephson said, explaining that the primary reason is something called "Location Optional Revenue (LOR)."
LOR was passed by the
The school district needs the increased funds, Josephson said, explaining that the district has experienced a 12 percent increase in its health insurance costs over each of the last two years, which he expects to actually increase, because the district will be forced to offer health insurance to more employees under the Affordable Care Act.
In answer to a question from Board member
The Board set a public meeting to discuss the final levy and budget numbers for
Scarbrough said he hopes residents understand the difference between the levy dollars and the building bond referendum up for a vote in February.
"The building bond referendum is based on the extreme need we have to replace an aging middle school and find room for our increasing enrollments at the elementary schools," the superintendent explained. "Factors such as slight increases in our elementary enrollment and needing more classrooms to implement all-day/every-day kindergarten are causing us to run out of room for our elementary children."
He explained that the tax levy the Board and district staff are considering now and finalizing in December is for operating the district's educational programs.
"To under-levy state-authorized property taxes would leave us without enough dollars to run current programs," Scarbrough said, adding that the state's funding plan for schools is a mix of state aid combined with local levy.
"Not only has the state been relying more on the levy portion to help equalize school funding, an under-levy for something like Local Options Revenue means that we lose the levy dollars AND the state aid dollars associated with that levy."
Roughly 19 percent of the property taxes in
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