Title: Act 1Taxpayer Relief Act
1Act 1-Taxpayer Relief Act
2Major Provisions
- Voters decide whether to shift from property to
income tax (EIT or PIT) - Tax Study Commission recommends ballot language
- School Board approves final language
- Future property tax rate increases above
inflationary index require voter approval - To prepare ballots requires earlier adoption of
preliminary budget - Installment payments for property tax
3Tax Study Commission
- School Board appoints 5, 7, or 9 members
- 1 Board Member
- No relatives of employee
- Appointed by September 14
- 90 days to make recommendation on referendum
language - Budget and staff provided by CRSD
- Budget of 20,000-(consultant study, court
reporter for public hearing, legal, etc.)
4Establishing the LTSC
- Board should adopt a resolution establishing the
LTSC, its functions, operational procedures, a
budget and resources of the commission. - Among the procedures
- How the commission will vote
- When meetings will take place
- Public participation/public comment
- Access to the superintendent, business manager
and solicitor - Budget and expenditures
5What is the LTSC required to do?
- LTSC must study 4 items
- Historic and present rates of district revenue
from current taxes. - The percentage of total district revenues
provided by current taxes.
6What is the LTSC required to do?
3. The age, income, employment and property use
characteristics of the existing tax base. 4.
Projected district revenue from current taxes,
including possible new taxes authorized under Act
1 (new EIT or PIT).
7Local Tax Study Commission
- Commission must make a nonbinding recommendation
to school board whether to levy an EIT or PIT for
the next fiscal year. - Must hold one public hearing
- Recommendation must be presented at a public
school board meeting. - School board votes to accept or reject
recommendation.
8LTSC - Areas to Examine Preexisting EIT
- Choices if the district already has an EIT
- A district may impose a supplemental EIT to fund
property tax relief. The taxpayer will simply
see an increase in the tax rate of the EIT. - A district may impose a PIT to fund the
exclusion, but will also have to convert the
existing EIT (in a revenue neutral manner) to a
PIT.
9Commissions recommendation should include the
following
- EIT vs. PIT
- Income tax rate to be presented to the voters
- Specific referendum question to be presented to
the voters - Reason for the recommendation
10Board Decision-Accept or Reject?
- If the decision of the Board is to
- Accept - Board must pass a resolution and submit
the referendum question to county election
officials. - Reject (2007 only) - Board must make its own
referendum question to present to county election
officials. - Reject (in 2009 and beyond), Board is free to
either present a referendum question or do
nothing.
11Budgeting Changes
- Changes to District Procedures
- Accelerated budget process (except with
certification to remain within Index). - School districts must not raise any single tax
more than the Index without voter approval in a
back-end referendum. - District may not
- Impose any tax (including an EIT) that was not
in-place in 2005-2006 without voter approval. - Raise an existing EIT without voter approval.
12If Within the Index
- Submitting a certification
- A school board that determines that its budget
will not require a tax increase greater than the
Index may adopt a resolution and avoid the
accelerated budget timeline. - If PDE agrees, the traditional budget timelines
apply under 24 P.S. 6-687. - A school board that adopts the resolution is not
eligible to seek referendum exceptions or to go
to referendum to exceed the Index.
13Information on www.CRSD.org
- Training presentations-PASBO
- Act 1 Overview
- Tax Study Commissions
- Calendar-PSBA
- Presentation-Fox Rothschild
- Proposed bylaws
- Proposed agenda for first meeting