enough is enough: no new school taxes!
DESCRIPTION
Enough is enough: no new school taxes!. Proposed tax increase:. 7.4 mils 10 years Cost to $100,000 homeowner/occupant = $226.63/yr. (Auditor). 2010 U.S. Census:. FAIRBORN:. State:. Poverty 14.2% Homeowners 69.2% Median Income $47,358 Median House Value $136,400. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
ENOUGH IS ENOUGH:NO NEW SCHOOL TAXES!
PROPOSED TAX INCREASE:
7.4 mils10 yearsCost to $100,000
homeowner/occupant = $226.63/yr. (Auditor)
2010 U.S. CENSUS:
FAIRBORN:
Poverty 20.7%
Homeowners 48.8%
Median Income
$39,303
Median House Value
$111,800
STATE:
Poverty 14.2%
Homeowners 69.2%
Median Income
$47,358
Median House Value
$136,400
2010 U.S. CENSUS
Between 2000 and 2010, the number of businesses in Fairborn decreased by 20%.
HOUSING ISSUES
• Foreclosure rates rising (FDH, 2012):
2010: 168
2011: 183
• Fairborn has 22% of the county’s population but 40% of its Section 8 housing (city’s 2010-2012 Draft Consolidated Plan).
FAIRBORN IS STRUGGLING
It’s time for our city and schools to wake up to the reality of Fairborn’s dire economic situation!
SCHOOLS TO CITY
FCS out-tax the city government about 3 to 1.
The city collects 2 levies on property – the schools have 7.
SCHOOL TAX RATE
Fairborn had a 2011 rate of taxation for schools at 52.65 (Auditor’s office). The only higher rates in the county are Yellow Springs and Bellbrook/Sugarcreek, two much wealthier communities.
Beavercreek = 48.90
Xenia = 43.90
PROPERTY TAXES CLIMBING
From 2001 to 2011, school funding from property taxes has gone up by 33.5% and school funding from all tax sources has increased 16.7%.
(OpportunityOhio.org )
PROPERTY VALUES DECLINING
The Dayton Daily News reported in September 2011 that Fairborn home values had dropped 8.92%, the biggest drop in Greene County.
SCHOOL DISTRICT INCOME TAX
According to the Department of Taxation, only 182 of 611 school districts in Ohio collect an income tax. Fairborn does. The city also collects an income tax.
IS FAIRBORN FAIR?
• Are we doing enough?
LOCAL EFFORT?
The ODE’s “local effort index” is designed to “reflect the extent of the effort residents...make in supporting...schools.”
State Average 1.0
Similar Districts 1.0567
Fairborn 1.2476
COSTS PER PUPIL:
• FCS spend $10,127 per pupil per year, much more than annual in-state tuition at Wright State University ($8354.00)!
• 2010 = $10,053.16
• 2009 = $ 9,592.00
• 2008 = $ 9,457.99
$ = QUALITY?
• At least two of the top ten districts in Ohio spend LESS per pupil:
Marion Local $9,143
Minster Local $9,346
• Oakwood spends $11,237, but has an average income of $115,347!
• Beavercreek spends $10,391 with an average income of $71,551.
WHY THE BUDGET SQUEEZE?
78.47% of the school’s entire budget is spent on salaries and benefits (ODE).
“SELECTIVE” CUTS
They threatened to cut everything from busing to gifted and special education programs. What DIDN’T they threaten to cut? Teacher and administrator salaries, of course!
SALARY COMPARISON -OH DEPT. OF EDUCATION:
Average Fairborn resident = $42,038*
Average Fairborn teacher = $56, 249
Average Fairborn school administrator = $82,529
NICE WORK IF YOU CAN GET IT…..
For fewer than 185 days of work, teachers on average already make $56,249. If they worked a full 260-day year like most Ohioans, their current hourly rate would equate to a median salary of $82,054.
OUT OF CONTROL SPENDING:
As household income grew by just 6.5% and inflation increased by 24.4% since 2001, teacher pay jumped 34.3% and total spending rose by 14.3% with current and future compensation costs swallowing (over) 77% of all spending.
www.opportunityohio.org
SUPERINTENDENT SALARY:
2011 – ODE and Buckeye Institute
City Enrollment Salary
B’creek 7,875 $118,400
Fairborn 4,752 $145,147*
Dayton 14,174 $145,384
*Highest -paid in Greene County!
OTHER HIGH FCS SALARIES
In 2011, 4 other FCS employees earned more than $100,000 (Buckeye Institute) in salary alone.
THE MYTH OF THE “UNDERPAID TEACHER”Sampled 54 Primary school teachers meeting the following criteria:
Identified as a teacher on the staff directory, working 7.5 hours/day for 181 days of the year;
2011 Salary available via Buckeye Institute:
34 of the 54 made $60,000 or more; 12 of those made $70,000 or more
This is salary ONLY and does not include benefits such as healthcare, education, etc.
THE MYTH OF THE “PAY FREEZE”
44 of the original 54 sampled had salary info available for all three years of 2009, 2010 and 2011. Of those 44, only 17 had one year or more at the same pay level. ALL others had pay increases each of those three years!
LOCAL SUPPORT
We were told that some communities “pay more than 80%” of all school costs locally.
There are four. Here is how they compare with Fairborn:
School District Average Income
Average assessed home value:
School Income Tax?
Meets State average local “effort” index?
Fairborn $42,038 $137,038 YES YES – exceeds
Indian Hill $249,547 $645,139 NO NO
Independence $70,756 $437,967 NO NO
New-Albany Plain
$143,877 $206,299 NO NO
Olentangy $105,402 $200,479 NO NO
FAIRBORN VS. BEAVERCREEK
• We were also told that Beavercreek pays much more of their school costs locally. According to the ODE, their average income is $71,551.
• Beavercreek does NOT meet the average (1.0) local effort index, coming in at only .06446.
• Fairborn residents are giving more with less to give.
SCARE TACTICS?
We were told that after the state took over the Little Miami School District, the community had to pay about three times more than they would have if they passed the district’s levy requests. That is FALSE.
THE TRUTH:
Dayton Daily News: Little Miami Schools had sought levies as high as 16.95 mils before the state took over. Afterward, they eventually passed a 13.95 mil levy – a much LOWER amount.
Another detail left out of this story was the fact that the Little Miami Schools were considered one of the worst local funders of schools in the state – not a generous community like Fairborn!
FIX THE FUNDING!
Over the past 15 years, the Ohio Supreme Court has ruled that the state’s system of funding schools is unconstitutional. Instead of all endless lobbying for more levies, let’s see the schools make some efforts to get this system fixed!
CAN WE AFFORD IT?
Based on the current financial status of Fairborn – another levy of any kind simply isn’t feasible.
If the state has to come in and force the district to make cuts, then so be it.
Enough is Enough!
QUESTIONS?FOR MORE INFO:
www.fairbornspeaks.com
For more info about the levy and other city issues.