![]()
|
|||||||||
|
The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.
©2004 Display
Advertising The
contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Local
option campaign underway When
Ted Thonstad was hired as superintendent of Sisters schools last month,
he knew that his first three months would be devoted to one overriding task:
winning voter approval of a new "local option levy."
A proposed four-year levy
of 75 cents per $1,000 of assessed value will be on the November 2 general
election ballot. That is the same rate as the levy that has been in effect
in Sisters since 2001-02, which expires at the end of the current fiscal
year (2004-05).
A local option brings in money
over and above what a district receives in its regular allocation from
the state. Districts can actually keep this money rather than tossing
it into the statewide school finance pot.
Even so, fewer than two dozen
of the 199 school districts in Oregon have been able to persuade their
voters to take this opportunity that state law provides to supplement
standard funding.
Thonstad said that in the
current year the local option tax is bringing in $798,000 for Sisters
schools, 9.1 percent of the district's operating funds.
"You can imagine what the
school district would look like if we lost those dollars," he told The
Nugget after Monday night's school board meeting. "Having this money is
critical for us to continue to provide the level of education that I think
the people in Sisters have come to expect."
Two weeks ago, a four-member
organizing committee was formed composed of Thonstad, two school board
members (Tom Coffield and Board Chairman Glen Lasken) and a layman, Mike
Gould, who is chairman of the campaign steering committee.
More than a dozen function-based
committees of three or four members each, will deal with range of topics
from telephones to data management to lawn signs.
These groups are gearing up
for a campaign that will become visible by the last week of September.
From then until the November 2 election, this small army of volunteers
will be working hard to persuade Sisters voters to mark their mail-in
ballots "Yes" on the Sisters school levy.
Time is short before the election,
but the school board decided to put this measure on the November ballot
rather than wait until later. The board did so partly because general
elections are free from the worry that not enough registrants will actually
vote. In other elections, state law requires property tax measures to
receive the approval of a majority of those registered as well as a majority
of those voting.
Thonstad noted that he is
the only person on the school staff legally allowed to work on levy campaigns
during regular working hours. State law grants that exemption to superintendents
because raising money for schools is part of their assigned duty. Other
school employees can help in such campaigns, but may do so only after
hours.
Thonstad is a veteran of successful
school money measure campaigns. A resident of Redmond for many years,
he led the citizen committees that helped that district pass a tax base
and a school bond measure. Later, as a member of the school board, he
helped with another school bond.
A Superintendent in Condon
he helped gain approval of a bond measure and a local option levy. |
|
|||||||