Posted: 12:00 a.m.
Friday, May 20, 2016
Middletown Schools: No tax hike through 2020
By
Michael D. Clark
Staff Write
MIDDLETOWN — Taxpayers
in Middletown
won’t see a school tax hike through 2020, school officials said Thursday. The
news was part of a five-year financial forecast for Middletown Schools during a
special meeting of the school board. Twice
a year — in October and May — each of Ohio’s 613 public school districts are
required by law to provide the state with five-year financial projections that
show the school systems will maintain solvency.
Middletown’s
latest projections show slight improvement from October’s and more importantly
continue a strong trend in recent years of increasing financial health for the
city schools, Randy Bertram, Middletown Schools treasurer, told the school
board’s leadership.
Costs
are down and the district’s bond rating from Moody’s private evaluation of Middletown’s finances has
improved from a grade of “A minus stable” to “A minus positive.”
Moreover,
said Bertram, whereas most Ohio districts
spend from 70 percent to 80 percent on labor costs, Middletown is at 37 percent due to years of
cost reductions, early retirement buyouts and outsourcing services, including
maintenance and busing.
“The
staffing numbers are way down due to the cuts and the new staff we’re hiring …
came in at a much cheaper price,” he said.
Middletown’s annual operating
budget is $75 million this school year and will drop to $71.3 million for the
2016-2017 school year. No budget shortfall is projected until 2020, when a
$381,000 deficit in forecast, according to Bertram.
Prior
to that year, the district is projected to have operating budget surpluses
decreasing annually from $3.9 million in 2016 to $725,000 in 2019.
“It’s
good to know we are on the right track and things are certainly looking
better,” said Bertram, who also pointed out the state’s most recent biennium
budget has been more generous with education funding for Middletown compared to previous state
allotments.
Voters
here last decided on a school tax hike when in May 2014 they barely approved a
$55 million bond issue combined with a 0.26-mill permanent improvement levy.
Such levy monies are not used for operational budgets but for infrastructure,
and the district is http://www.journal-news.com/news/news/local-education/middletown-breaks-ground-on-new-school-facility/nqygr/" rel="nofollow - “I
feel good about the numbers and where we are,” Middletown Board of Education
President Chris Urso said after the presentation. “You always want to make sure
you are using the taxpayers’ dollars as responsibly as possible.”
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