Pickens County Sen. Larry Martin plans to introduce legislation
next year that will help ensure school districts don't unfairly reap
a windfall from next year's property tax law changes. He's right to
do so. Martin's bill will remedy at least one small problem, but the
overall tax plan overwhelmingly favors the rich and remains so
flawed that it should be repealed.
Lawmakers next year plan to eliminate school operating taxes from
owner-occupied home tax bills. The state will take over those
funding responsibilities with money from a new 1 percent sales tax.
The money coming from the state will be based on how much districts
collect next year from property taxes. As a result, some school
districts have been raising property taxes in order to get more
money from the state next year.
Martin's bill solves that problem by simply rolling back the year
used to figure school district funding. Under Martin's proposal,
each school district would receive a funding level equal to the
district's 2005-06 revenues -- rather than its 2006-07 revenues. The
state funding formula also takes into account growth in the district
and inflation.
Martin's bill prevents school districts from taking advantage of
the change in tax law. Some school districts recently raised taxes,
and critics suggest they are trying to get more money from the state
next year. Martin suggested that was the case with the Pickens
County School District, which raised taxes by 4 mills. More
dramatically, Spartanburg's District 5, which includes parts of
Greer, raised its tax rate by 36 mills.
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While Martin's proposal addresses one small concern, the state's
tax-swap plan overall is grossly irresponsible. For starters, the
initiative provides a huge windfall for owners of expensive homes
while placing extra financial burdens on renters. Also, owners of
more modest homes will see little to no benefit from this shift from
property taxes to the more regressive sales tax.
The tax swap also is an assault on local control. By usurping
local school district taxing ability, the state is robbing districts
of their decision-making authority when it comes to such things as
raising teacher salaries or paying for new programs. Reacting to
this loss of local control, Moody's Investors Service recently put a
negative outlook on public school borrowing in the state. That could
lower credit ratings for school districts, costing schools more
money when borrowing for capital expenses.
Under the plan, lawmakers also are swapping a highly stable tax
-- the property tax -- for a less stable one -- the sales tax. Yet
another concern is that the sales tax does not grow at the same rate
as the property tax base it's replacing. Could that mean lower
per-pupil expenditures in the future? Lawmakers didn't devote much
study to such an important issue.
Lawmakers dedicated a great deal of political passion but not
much critical analysis to the tax-swap plan. The tax swap is a boon
for wealthier homeowners, but it's likely to create a lot of trouble
for public schools. |