Date: Fri 15-Mar-1996
Date: Fri 15-Mar-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: KAAREN
Quick Words:
budget-council
Full Text:
Council Approves A $50.9 Million Budget
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B Y K AAREN V ALENTA
Legislative Council Wednesday night approved a $50.9 million municipal and
school budget that reflects a 12.9 percent spending increase mostly due to
debt payments on anticipated capital projects.
The council approved a municipal budget of $22 million, up 2 percent, and a
$28,286,212 school budget, up 4.57 percent but $250,000 less than the Board of
Education had requested.
The council recommended putting $575,000 of the $2 million audited surplus
into the capital reserve fund to help pay for the cost of renovating Town Hall
South. The remaining $1,425,000 would be used to help offset taxes next year.
Debt service will increase 91.6 percent, to $7,303,195, if voters approve
borrowing for the proposed high school and Hawley School additions, a new roof
for Head O'Meadow School, and $650,000 in road reconstruction. The debt
service includes the already-approved Booth Library expansion but does not yet
reflect the cost of the town's sewer project.
Public hearings on the proposed $50,913,305 budget will be held in the Middle
School auditorium at 8 pm on Tuesday, March 26, and at 9 am on Saturday, March
30.
The proposed school projects - $26.6 million for the high school, $3.9 million
for Hawley School and $630,000 for the Head O'Meadow roof - will increase debt
service by more than $3 million, but school officials pointed out that the
town will receive $1 million back from the state in school building grant
revenue, making the net cost to the town about $2 million. The high school and
Hawley School projects qualify for 40 percent state reimbursement and the Head
O'Meadow roof will be reimbursed 36.8 percent, if the projects are done now.
A separate vote will be taken later on the proposed school projects. If they
are not approved, the debt service will be removed from the town budget.
The tax rate has not yet been set but is expected to be approximately 26 mills
with the school projects. Under the current mill rate of 32, the owner of a
house assessed at $100,000 will pay $3,200 in real estate property taxes this
year. To compute next year's taxes, property owners must use their new
assessment, which was set in the town's recent property revaluation, and
multiply it by the anticipated mill rate.
According to the tax assessor, the average residential assessment increased by
about 40 percent in the revaluation. If an assessment increased from $100,000
to $140,000, the property owner who paid $3,200 this year would pay $3,640
next year if the mill rate is 26. Since revaluation, each mill amounts to
approximately $1.4 million in spending.
The budget passed 10-2 with council members Jack Rosenthal and Lisa Schwartz
casting dissenting votes because they disagreed with the council's decision to
trim the school board's request by $250,000. Councilman Joseph Borst, chairman
of the council's education subcommittee, said his committee took the
anticipated enrollment increase of 137 students for next year, multiplied it
by the $7,416 spent to educate each student, added $200,000 for the district's
new computer technology program, and added that total - $1,215,992 - to last
year's $27 million school budget to approximate next year's recommended
spending level.
School officials and parents pleaded with the council to retain the $250,000
and to support the three school projects. They pointed out that a report from
the New England Association of Schools and Colleges, an accredition agency,
this week said students are getting a strong education at the high school even
though it is "underfunded" by the community and needs improvements in the
facility and the programs.
Jack Ryan, a former council member, said the town is taking in $1 to $2
million a year in new revenue due to the building boom.
"These new residents are looking for us to improve the schools," Mr Ryan said,
"but we are in the bottom quarter of the state in per pupil spending."
"I don't think the Board of Education is asking too much," Paula Newberry
said. "As a taxpayer I don't like what I'm looking at either, but cuts are
going to end up doing more damage than we realize."
School Board President Herb Rosenthal said the school district has shown good
faith in cutting costs, returning $93,000 in unspent money to the town's
general fund at the end of the last fiscal year and putting another $230,000
of savings into its self-funded insurance plan.
"When you take into account the increase in enrollment, our spending is only
up two percent," he said. "We're spending less than 84 percent of the other
districts in the state per student yet our students score in the top 85
percent."
The proposed municipal budget includes $1,350,000 in road reconstruction
costs. Last year the operating budget included $1 million for roads and
another $1 million was bonded. Some council members wanted to put the entire
$2 million into the operating budget this year because the roads are an annual
expense; others wanted to bond the entire amount. They decided to recommend
bonding $650,000.