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1996-1997
Revenue Controls
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Revenue Controls
There is no correlation between public school student needs and the cost of living. Public schools are experiencing rising costs (above the rate of inflation) associated with educating EEN and bilingual students, opening new facilities, student transportation, improvements to school building safety, utility and heating costs, and textbooks.
School districts that are opening new buildings are not allowed an adjustment for increased staffing and building operations costs.
The original figure on which current and future revenue controls are based is 1992-93 costs. School districts that were frugal in their spending, and lived within their means, are penalized, relative to districts whose expenditures exceeded their revenues in that particular year.
School district revenue controls exacerbate the per-pupil spending disparities that currently exist among school districts in Wisconsin. School districts with high per-pupil spending were allowed to raise more money (on a dollar basis) than school districts with lower per-pupil spending.
Strict revenue controls were not imposed upon other units of local government with property taxing authority, such as counties and municipalities.
Posted May 29, 1997
At the Capitol News Archives
1996-1997
Brief Background: SAGE
1997-1999 State Budget Brief
California's Prop 13 Debacle: Could This Lie in Wisconsin's Future?
Revenue Controls
Challenging the QEO
Joint Finance Committee Action on Wisconsin Technical College System
Key Education Proposals in Governor's 1997-98 State Budget Address
State Budget is Victory for Public Education, Children
Big Drop in Raises: The QEO is Even Worse Than it Appears
Face to Face with Decision Makers: UniServ Dinners Provide Direct Access to Them
Putting Teacher Salaries in Perspective
QEO Takes Money Out of Your Pocket
<< More At the Capitol News Archives