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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Schools
seek same local option rate Sisters
property taxpayers will pay the same rate they currently do -- 75 per $1,000
of assessed valuation -- if voters decide in November to renew the local
option tax levy that has kept Sisters schools operating since voters approved
it in November 2000.
The levy will run out at the
end of the next school year.
The Sisters School Board agreed
Monday night, August 30, to seek the same rate for the next four years
instead of asking for a few cents more or less per $1,000.
As Sisters' tax base and property
values grow, so has the revenue generated by local option. The tax is
expected to generate more than $800,000 per year.
Those funds make up a vital
part of the school district budget and school board members consider a
renewal of local option absolutely critical.
Even as the board refined
the measure to be placed on the November 2 ballot, they received news
that enrollment has increased at all three Sisters schools as the school
year is about to begin.
Sisters Elementary School
has 459 enrolled; there are 303 enrolled at Sisters Middle School and
539 at Sisters High School for a district-wide total of 1,301.
That's good news on one hand;
state funding is provided on a per-student basis. But it takes a lot of
new students in one school to pay for a new teacher, so rising enrollment
puts pressure on class sizes.
Board members noted Monday
night that, while Sisters has not been able to reduce class sizes, they
are far smaller than they would be without local option funding.
In other business, the board
authorized Ted Thonstad to discuss with representatives of Verizon Wireless
the possibility of siting a cell phone tower on school property.
Verizon approached the school
district with a proposition to install a tower in place of one of the
football field light poles. The tower would hold both wireless communication
equipment and the football lights.
The school district could
benefit from monthly lease fees from a tower.
The board made no commitment
other than to find out more about the proposition. |
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