Issue 28
Voters should support school bond issue
Thursday, October 21, 2004
What ought to be a good time for the two groups that are primarily in charge of the Pickerington Local School District seems instead to be a difficult one.
The teachers think they have been disrespected by the board of education and are making that known to the community.
The board of education has worked hard to keep costs low and to maximize the state funding available to it from the Ohio School Facilities Commission, but seems to feel these accomplishments have done little but make it a target for criticism.
Part of the board's cost-control effort led to a teacher contract, narrowly approved by the teachers, that extends for only two years, this year and next, instead of the traditional three.
Effective this year, base pay rises 1.5-percent. Next year, base pay rises 2.0 percent.
Of course, that's base pay. Real, actual pay is an additional 2.1 percent on top of that. (This is an average, with some teachers receiving more and some receiving less, but even so, by definition, whatever they get or don't get this year will be made up next.)
That means raises this year of 3.6-percent and next year of 4.1 percent. Private sector raises usually are less, and teachers' membership in the state pension system is worth a great deal in addition.
These numbers are important because they are the be-all and end-all of school operating budgets. Teachers' salary alone, without benefits, accounts for about 60 percent of Pickerington's expenses. Adding administrators and staff pay, and benefits for all of them, raises the account to 80 percent.
Everything else - transportation, pay to play, utilities, etc., etc., etc. - is window dressing. Yes, with a $70-million budget, the remaining 20-percent, or $14-million, is expensive window dressing, but in proportionate terms, you have to go where the money is, and the $56-million paid to personnel - teaching, support and administrative-dominates the picture.
At this point, you could be forgiven for asking, what does any of this have to do with a bond issue?
As the board and administration will tell every voter who says, ''I just voted you money last year! Why are you back again?,'' operating money is entirely separate from building money. State law distinguishes the two quite clearly, for good and sufficient reasons.
But this is a false distinction. For one thing, each time the board, the administration and the teachers say bond issues and operating levies are different things, there is another time they will tell you how important a good physical classroom is to a student's learning.
More important, in terms of the ballot, is voter perception. How are you, as a voter, more likely to think about your tax bill? That you have 10.80-mills in bond issue due plus 28.98-mills in operating levy? Or are you more likely to just total it up (including a 0.43-mill permanent improvement levy) as 40.21 mills?
Most voters probably just look at their actual dollar figure. If you have a $200,000 home or condo, you pay $2,460 in property tax each year to support Pickerington schools.
By Conservative Taxpayer
Voters should support school bond issue
Thursday, October 21, 2004
What ought to be a good time for the two groups that are primarily in charge of the Pickerington Local School District seems instead to be a difficult one.
The teachers think they have been disrespected by the board of education and are making that known to the community.
The board of education has worked hard to keep costs low and to maximize the state funding available to it from the Ohio School Facilities Commission, but seems to feel these accomplishments have done little but make it a target for criticism.
Part of the board's cost-control effort led to a teacher contract, narrowly approved by the teachers, that extends for only two years, this year and next, instead of the traditional three.
Effective this year, base pay rises 1.5-percent. Next year, base pay rises 2.0 percent.
Of course, that's base pay. Real, actual pay is an additional 2.1 percent on top of that. (This is an average, with some teachers receiving more and some receiving less, but even so, by definition, whatever they get or don't get this year will be made up next.)
That means raises this year of 3.6-percent and next year of 4.1 percent. Private sector raises usually are less, and teachers' membership in the state pension system is worth a great deal in addition.
These numbers are important because they are the be-all and end-all of school operating budgets. Teachers' salary alone, without benefits, accounts for about 60 percent of Pickerington's expenses. Adding administrators and staff pay, and benefits for all of them, raises the account to 80 percent.
Everything else - transportation, pay to play, utilities, etc., etc., etc. - is window dressing. Yes, with a $70-million budget, the remaining 20-percent, or $14-million, is expensive window dressing, but in proportionate terms, you have to go where the money is, and the $56-million paid to personnel - teaching, support and administrative-dominates the picture.
At this point, you could be forgiven for asking, what does any of this have to do with a bond issue?
As the board and administration will tell every voter who says, ''I just voted you money last year! Why are you back again?,'' operating money is entirely separate from building money. State law distinguishes the two quite clearly, for good and sufficient reasons.
But this is a false distinction. For one thing, each time the board, the administration and the teachers say bond issues and operating levies are different things, there is another time they will tell you how important a good physical classroom is to a student's learning.
More important, in terms of the ballot, is voter perception. How are you, as a voter, more likely to think about your tax bill? That you have 10.80-mills in bond issue due plus 28.98-mills in operating levy? Or are you more likely to just total it up (including a 0.43-mill permanent improvement levy) as 40.21 mills?
Most voters probably just look at their actual dollar figure. If you have a $200,000 home or condo, you pay $2,460 in property tax each year to support Pickerington schools.
By Conservative Taxpayer


