Title: School Finance in Iowa
1School Finance in Iowa
- Iowa Association of School Boards
2School Finance - Background
- Dillons rule
- School districts only have those powers expressly
authorized by the Code of Iowa. - Home rule
- Cities and counties can do anything not expressly
prohibited.
3School Finance - Background
- The school foundation formula relies on two
sources of revenue - State General Fund appropriations
- Locally raised property taxes
- Before discussing the school foundation formula,
it is important to have a basic understanding of
property taxes.
4School Finance - Background
- Property Tax Background
- Assessed v. taxable valuations
- Rollbacks
- Tie between residential and agricultural property
- Assessment growth limitation
- Taxing Districts, Taxing Authorities
- Tax Rate x Taxable Value Taxes Levied
- Lag between assessments and district budgets.
5School Finance - Background
- Property Tax Credits
- Residential - Homestead and Military Service
Credits reduce the taxable value by 4,850 and
1,850, respectively. - Elderly and Disabled tax credit based on
percentage of income. - Agricultural - Family Farm and Ag Land Tax
Credits - difference between regular program tax
levy and 5.40 uniform levy.
6School Finance - Background
- Agricultural Property
- Different than other classes of property
- Taxed based on productivity value
- Value in relationship to all other agricultural
property in county - Roughly 30 of market value
7School Finance - Background
- Examples-
- Property tax on three different properties - a
home, a business and a farm. All utilize the
same levy rate. - Residential property - 1.34 levy on 100,000
home. (.459660 x 100,000) - 4,850 x 1.34 /
1,000 55.10 - Commercial property 1.34 levy on 100,000
business. (.991509 x 100,000) x 1.34 / 1,000
132.86 - Agricultural property 1.34 levy on 250,000
farm. (.3 x 250,000) x 1.34 / 1,000 100.50
8School Aid - Basics
- Purpose of foundation formula
- Code of Iowa, 257.31
- equalize educational opportunity, to provide
good education for all children of Iowa, to
provide property tax relief, decrease the
percentage of school costs paid from property
taxes, and to provide reasonable control of
school costs.
9School Aid - Basics
- The Bright Line in School Finance
- Educational program expenditures are funded and
equalized by the state foundation formula. - Facility expenditures are funded locally (with
some state assistance) and are not under the
finance formula.
10School Aid - Basics
- Foundation formula - ceiling v. floor
- The foundation formula results in a maximum
expenditure per pupil and therefore a maximum
amount a district can raise and spend (note not
every district has the same ceiling). - Other states school aid formulas have created a
minimum spending per pupil. - This has led to a number of lawsuits nationwide.
- Iowas Constitution does not guarantee
educational equity.
11School Aid - Basics
- Basic Principles
- The school aid formula is a child-based formula.
- The formula provides funding on a per child
basis. - The total amount of foundation formula revenue is
the number of children times a cost per child.
12Operation of Foundation Formula
- Three components
- Uniform Levy - Property tax levy of 5.40 per
thousand of taxable valuation. - State Foundation Percentage - Amount the state
pays in excess of 5.40 - varies by district
(87.5 of cost per pupil). - Additional Levy - Property tax levy which funds
the difference between the Combined District Cost
and the sum of the Uniform Levy and the State
Foundation Percentage.
13Operation of Foundation Formula
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16What is the Purpose of the Foundation Percentage?
- Determines how much the state is going to
equalize local property tax rates. - If no state foundation percentage, tax rates for
highest district would look like
17Purpose of Foundation Percentage
- If foundation percentage set at 100 percent, the
tax rate would look like
18Purpose of Foundation Percentage
- Regardless of the state foundation percentage,
total funding to the district is exactly the same
(just who pays is changed).
19Operation of Foundation Formula
- Two factors affecting district Regular Program
budgets - 1. Enrollment - increases or decreases in
enrollment affect district budgets. - 2. Combined district cost changes (Allowable
Growth). - Changes in growth in valuations - uniform levy
rate (5.40) or foundation percentage have no
effect on Regular Program.
20School Aid - Basics
- Basic Calculations - District Costs
- Regular Program District Cost - budget enrollment
times district cost per pupil. 608.4 students x
5,128 3,119,875 - Combined District Cost - sum of Regular Program
plus special education, ELL, media services. - What happens if less is spent? Carries forward
as unspent budget authority - can be used in
future (one-time).
21School Aid - Basics
- Basic Calculations - Allowable Growth
- Last years minimum District Cost Per Pupil
(e.g., 4,931) - Allowable Growth Rate 4.0
- This years district cost per pupil growth .04
x 4,931 197.24 - rounds to 197 - 4,931 197 5,128
- If District Cost Per Pupil is higher than
minimum, only get the fixed dollar - not 4.0.
For example, 5,072 197 5,269 - Not 5,072 x 4 5,275
22School Aid - Basics
- Basic Calculations (cont.)
- Differing District Costs Per Pupil
- Slightly over 50 of districts have a cost per
pupil above the minimum although the deviation is
less than 4.5. - Differences will be reduced over time.
- When is 4 allowed growth not 4?
- Common perception is all districts receive 2
increase in budgets. - In FY 2004, 2 allowed growth resulted in 32.4
million new money (1.4) of which 27.5 million
was due to the budget guarantee. - In FY 2005, 2 allowed growth resulted in 39.2
million of new money (1.7), of which 31.1
million was due to the budget guarantee. - In FY 2006, 4 allowed growth resulted in 71.7
million of new money (3.0), of which 18.8
million was due to the budget guarantee. - In FY 2007, 4 allowed growth resulted in 88.3
million of new money (3.7), of which 18.8
million was due to the budget guarantee.
23School Aid - Basics
- Basic Calculations - Budget Guarantee
- Principle Districts receive what they received
in the prior year for the Regular Program Budget
regardless of enrollment changes. - Fact The budget guarantee is being phased out.
- Base Calculation (the way it was)
24School Aid - Basics
- Set two separate calculations
- Calculation 1 Scale down option
- Declining percentage of FY 04 Regular Program
District Cost (with adjustment) as follows -
FY 2004 100 FY 2008 60 FY 2012 20
FY 2005 90 FY 2009 50 FY 2013 10
FY 2006 80 FY 2010 40 FY 2014 0
FY 2007 70 FY 2011 30
25Scale down (continued)
26101 Option
- Calculation 2 101 Option
- District would be eligible to receive 101 of
prior years regular program district cost. - Does NOT include any accumulated guarantee (any
amount in excess of headcount times cost per
pupil for FY 2004)
27101 (continued)
28Implications of the Phase-Out
- Districts with declining enrollment will see a
reduction in their budget authority (and
revenues). - The reduction in authority will accelerate for
those districts under the scale down option. - Districts on the 101 option will have one year
to react to significant reductions in
enrollments. - Use tools available on the IASB website to
estimate the impact and plan now.
29School Aid - Basics
- Basic Calculations - On Time Funding
- -Principle - Districts with increasing enrollment
have a way of capturing growth. Due to year
delay in enrollment count in funding formula -
districts with increasing enrollment have
shortfalls. - -Calculation
30School Aid - Basics
- On-Time Funding (Cont.)
- Senate File 203 makes permanent the on-time
funding. - Districts requesting the authority must adopt a
resolution and notify the SBRC by November 1 each
year.
31School Finance - Weightings
- Why Weight?
- Some populations have higher costs than others.
Two choices pay more per student or count
students at value greater than 1. - Special education has three weightings .72,
1.21, 2.74 depending on severity. - These are in addition to the 1.0 weight.
32School Finance - Spending Authority
- Spending authority is the sum of
- Combined District Cost (property tax and state
aid) - Miscellaneous income anything not above
- Unspent balance from previous years
- Why important?
- Districts cannot exceed spending authority
- Not a measure of cash
- Why allow districts to carry forward unused
spending authority?
33Building Blocks of Spending Authority
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36Cash and Unspent Balance Pictorial
Representation
37School Aid - Funding Programs
- Educational Program Levies
- Instructional Support Levy (ISL)
- Only levy available to schools to increase
General Fund budget. - Maximum of 10 of Regular Program Budget.
- Can be either property taxes or income surtax, or
combination. - Can be board-approved (maximum five years -
subject to petition) or voter-approved (maximum
10 years).
38School Aid - Funding Programs
- ISL may be used for any General Fund purpose
except - Dropout prevention programs
- Talented and Gifted programs
- PPEL uses
- Management levy uses
- Special education deficits
- ISL generates nearly 140 million statewide
- 11 state / 36 income surtax / 52 property tax
39School Aid - Facilities
- Levies Outside General Fund
- Facility Related Levies
- Board-Approved Physical Plant and Equipment Levy
(PPEL). Maximum 0.33 / thousand. - Voter-Approved PPEL. Maximum 1.34 / thousand.
Maximum 10 years. Caution - allowable uses
slightly different (simple majority). Can use
income surtax as well. - Public Education and Recreation Levy (PERL).
Maximum 0.135 / thousand. Public use
playgrounds/recreation facilities.
40School Aid - Facilities
- Facility related levies (cont.)
- Library Levy (AKA Amana Library Levy). Maximum
of 0.20 / thousand. Used for joint library
facilities if no local public library available. - Local option sales tax. Maximum of 0.01
additional local option sales tax for school
infrastructure. - Can use for repair and renovation of buildings
and facilities. - Distributed based on number of students your
district has attending school in the county in
which passed. - Maximum 10 years or less if ballot specifies.
41School Aid - Facilities
- Local Option Sales Tax Changes votes since
7/1/04 - Expanded Purpose Changes the definition of
infrastructure to include PPEL (e.g., buses,
technology, repair) and Public Education and
Recreation Levy (PERL) purposes. - Revenue Purpose Statements Requires revenue
purpose statements (how are you going to spend
the funds). The statements are specific to each
district in the county.
42Local Option Tax and Supplement Funds
- If want to change revenue purpose statements must
have a district-wide election. Requires a 50
majority to change purpose. - Make sure statements are in harmony with ballot
language and they should not state broader
purposes than those contained in ballot language.
43Facility related levies (cont.)
- Supplement Funding
- Starting in FY 2005, supplement funding
appropriated to bring districts up to 420 (or to
a level the fund can support). - The math
- If funds are available to bring everyone to 420
44School Aid - Facilities
- Facility related levies (cont.)
- Bonded Debt
- Requires 60 majority - onetime election to go up
from 2.70 to 4.05 - Maximum of 4.05 / thousand
- Maximum 20 years
- Best time to vote is October, November and
December.
45School Aid - Other Levies
- Management Levy-
- Used to pay unemployment benefits, insurance (not
employee benefits), judgements against the
district, early retirement benefits. - Cash Reserve Levy
- Reserve for the General Fund of the school
district. - Generated by property tax via school board action
annually. - Used to fund spending authority but does not
directly generate spending authority.
46School Aid - Contacts
- Iowa Association of School Boards,1-800-795-4272
- Department of Management,Lisa Oakley,
515-281-8485
47School Aid - Web Resources
- IASB www.ia-sb.org
- Dept. of Education www.state.ia.us/educate/index.
html - Legislature - bills, amendments, etc.
www.legis.state.ia.us - Legislative Fiscal Bureau www.legis.state.ia.us/
lfb/ - Dept. of Revenue www.state.ia.us/government/drf/
index.html