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Clayton School Board deceives taxpayers
A statement in the
Clayton County School Board's press release regarding the adoption of its
millage rate for 2005-2006 insists that, although the Board was required to hold
three public hearings as required by the "Taxpayers Bill of Rights," it was not
"raising taxes" because it was leaving the millage rate the same as the previous
year.
The Clayton School Board has adopted a mathematically-incorrect millage rate
that will substantially overtax the property owners of Clayton County.
Clayton County Public Schools will operate on a 2005-2006 budget of
$332,172,530. Of that amount, $124,500,000 will be funded by property tax
dollars. The School Board adopted a millage rate of 18.916, the same rate as
last year.
The mathematically-correct millage
rate is 17.611, 1.305 mills lower. If calculated mathematically, the millage
rate is nothing more than the portion of the budget to be funded by tax dollars
divided by the net tax digest. This is the process recommended and taught by the
Department of Revenue-- it is the ONLY correct way to calculate the rate.
Newly-elected school board members are taught a different, incorrect method.
Newly-elected city council members and county commissioners are not taught how
to calculate the rate at all.
The arbitrarily high rate imposed by the School Board will overtax Clayton
County property owners by at least $9,225,000 more than is necessary to fully
fund this year's budget.
The owner of a $150,000 (assessed value, not considering exemptions) home in
Clayton County will pay $1,134.96 in property taxes for schools, about $78.30
more than what would be required with a mathematically-correct millage rate.
It is my opinion that the setting of an arbitrary rate, especially a high one,
is tantamount to the School Board lying to its constituents.
The Board adopted a budget that contained a revenue line item, "Revenue expected
from property taxes" or something similar. Through the budget process including
public hearings, the Board "told" its taxpayers that they will have to pay a
certain dollar amount-- in the case of Clayton Schools, $124,500,000 -- to fully
pay for government services rendered.
The School Board adopted a millage (tax) rate, however, that will take MORE tax
dollars than the taxpayers were told would be collected from them.
Granted, there is no law requiring the Board to adopt a mathematically-correct
rate. It is the job of the people-- and Clayton County's free press-- to insist
that the Board take no more tax dollars from its property owners than is
required to fund the budget.
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