Title: Bedford Public Schools
1Bedford Public Schools
- Bedford Business Association
- March 13, 2008
2Great Students
Great Staff
Great Community
Excellent Education
318 Mill Non-homesteadTax Renewal
418 Mill Non-homesteadTax Renewal
- 1 Mill
- 1 for every 1,000 of Taxable Value
18 Mills 1,800 for a 200,000 Business (100,000
Taxable Value)
5Bedford Public SchoolsMember of BBA since 1983
(25 years)
- Largest Work Force in Bedford Township
- Established 1946
- 665 Employees
- 67 of all employees live in Bedford Township
- Budget 50 Million
- Payroll - 1.3 million Bi-weekly
- 700,000 paid to local merchants last year
6C/C Schools as a Business
- Product / Neighbor / Competition
- We must provide a good product
- State and National Recognition
- Blue Ribbon Schools
- National Community School of Excellence
- Michigan Recreation and Parks Association / CSA
7C/C Schools as a Business
- Product / Neighbor / Competition
- We must be a good neighbor
- Trade Fair
- Community Education
- Community Days / Fireworks
- Parks
- Relay for Life
- Senior Citizens Center / Health Van / MOW
- R.S.V.P. / CASA
- Good Friday Service
- Childcare / Latchkey
8C/C Schools as a Business
- Product / Neighbor / Competition
- We must be Competitive
- Parochial Schools
- Charter Schools
- Schools of Choice
- Home Schooling
9C/C Schools as a Business
- Bedford Public Schools
- Fabric of the Community
- People move to the community for
- . . . Quality of life / Quality of schools
- Schools remain strong and support the community
- If the schools are weakened / community suffers
10C/C Schools as a Business
- Fiscally Responsible
- Maximize use of Revenue
- Control Expenses
- (88 of expenses personnel related)
- Government Regulations
- Minimum Wage Increase
- Unfunded Mandates
11BPS Revenue Breakdown FY 07
12Six Year Financial History
13Cumulative Budget CutsSix Year History
14How Schools Are Funded
- There are 781 school districts in Michigan 552
local districts, plus 229 public school
academies. - There are 1.7 million public school pupils in
Michigan. - The School aid budget supports all 781 districts
to provide a free education to 1.7 million
pupils.
15How Schools Are Funded
- The School Aid Budget pays for the day-to-day
operations of local public schools, enabling the
Legislature to maintain and support a system of
free public elementary and secondary schools as
defined by law. -
- -Michigan
Constitution
16How Schools Are Funded
State-Local School Finance Relationship
- Amounts of total revenue for each district are
determined by the state pursuant to state law and
appropriations. - School aid revenues and total local operating
property taxes determine the amount the state can
afford. - Local school operating property taxes are
subtracted from the total to determine state
payments to district. - School districts cannot levy operating taxes.
17How Schools Are Funded
- School Aid Fund (SAF)
- SAF provides the majority of state funding for
schools. - Certain taxes are reserved for deposit into the
SAF to pay for school operations. - The State Constitution requires the SAF to be
used exclusively for schools, higher education
and school employee retirement. - Districts pay retirement contributions as a flat
percentage of payrolls.
18How Schools Are Funded
- Foundation Allowance
- State/Local Funding
- Each district is required to levy 18 mills on
non-homestead property to receive full pupil
funding. - The state calculates local revenue from the 18
mills on a per pupil basis. - The state deducts per pupil local revenue from
the foundation allowance.
19School Aid Revenue Sources
- State sales use tax (47.5)
- State education tax (18.8)
- State income tax (18.4)
- Lottery transfer (6.3)
- Tobacco tax (4.1)
- Real estate transfer (2.2)
- Other (2.7)
20Why We are in a Crisis Situation
- Declining Enrollment
- Fewer pupils means a loss of revenue to schools.
- More than half of all districts are facing
declining enrollment. - Total state pupil counts have declined from
1,695,000 in 1998 to 1,665,000 in 2007. - Loss of students does not mean a loss of equal
expenditures.
21Why We are in a Crisis Situation
- School Infrastructure
- There is no state support for school
infrastructure. - Districts may have difficulty raising sufficient
local tax revenue to improve or maintain aging
buildings. - District ability to raise capital outlay funds is
inequitable.
2218 MillNon-homestead Renewal
23Bedford Public Schools
24Great Students
Great Staff
Great Community
Excellent Education
Thank You!
25(No Transcript)
26Bedford Public Schools
- Introductions
- Jon White
- Superintendent of Education