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October 16, 2007Madison School Board Discussion of Fund 80 Based Community Partnerships
Props to the school board for discussing and addressing this matter. Audio 13MB MP3 Much more about Fund 80 here [RSS] Another factor that will drive property taxes is the changing real estate market. I noted nearly two years ago, that Madison had about 14,000 more parcels in 2005, than 1990. This creates a larger pie to spread government and school spending across. Slower or no growth in the property tax base may mean larger tax increases per parcel than we've seen in the past (along with flat state funding). Madison is considered a "property rich" school district, therefore we receive a much smaller percentage of our budget from redistributed state taxes and fees (this approach was referred to as the "Robin Hood Act" in Texas). The MMSD's handy citizen's budget notes that 65% of its revenues arrive via local property taxes. Finally, Madison's property rich status means that any increase in spending beyond the revenue limits via referendums reduce state aids. For example, $1.00 of new referendum spending may cost local property taxpayers $1.60 or thereabouts. This concept is known as "Negative Aid". Related: K-12 Tax & Spending Climate. Posted by Jim Zellmer at October 16, 2007 8:05 AMSubscribe to this site via RSS/Atom: Newsletter signup | Send us your ideas |