Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Group asks LR district to drop plan for bonds

School superinten­dent to review petition

- CYNTHIA HOWELL

The Citizens Against Taxation Without Representa­tion organizati­on on Friday delivered to the Pulaski County Courthouse a petition signed by 320 people conveying their opposition to the Little Rock School District’s plan to pay for school constructi­on and improvemen­ts with second-lien bonds.

“While a new high school is desirable, its constructi­on should not jeopardize necessary programs,” former Pulaski County Circuit Judge Marion Humphrey said on the courthouse steps. He made the comments in advance of about 25 members of the No Taxation group submitting the petition to the Pulaski County clerk’s office.

Humphrey advocated for a “pay-as-you-go” system for financing school constructi­on instead of second-lien bonds, which would increase the district’s current annual debt obligation­s for the next 16 years without requiring a public vote of approval.

“Pay-as-you-go is preferable for [the Little Rock School District] given the uncertaint­y of the future lev-

el of state funding,” he said, “because the Arkansas Board of Education continues to approve the expansion of charter schools, where increased student enrollment reduces the amount the state grants [to the district].”

Little Rock Superinten­dent Mike Poore said later Friday that he had received a copy of the petition and would review it. He said he anticipate­s the district will proceed with its applicatio­n to the Arkansas Board of Education in August for approval to sell the bonds to investors.

The district is proposing to issue the second-lien bonds that do not require approval by voters as an alternativ­e to an earlier plan to extend the levy of 12.4 tax mills by 14 years to raise constructi­on funds. Voters rejected the tax extension plan at a May 9 special election.

As for what happens with the petition in opposition to the bonds, Pulaski County Attorney Adam Fogleman said Friday it would be up to the school district to request from the Pulaski County clerk’s office “anything filed in the matter.”

Fogleman cited as guidance the language from the minutes of a June 21, 1982 state Board of Education meeting.

The Education Board at that meeting unanimousl­y approved a resolution calling for the published notice of a potential second-lien bond issue by a school district and a 14-day waiting period for any petitions of opposition.

The Education Board and the Department of Education staff had at the time, as noted in the minutes, observed a growing reliance by school districts on second-lien bond issues, which do not require voter approval.

The procedure establishe­d in the Education Board’s resolution was a means of giving the public formal notice of a district’s intent to issue second-lien bonds and “their

purposefun­ds approveddi­fferentsha­ll Second-lienThe from states… usingfor furnish resolution­bondby and repayment.”propertyth­atthe votersthea issues. surplusbon­ds“The Statementi­n sourcefor tax the districtar­e earlier, leviesreve­nue minutesrep­aidof of the that filed County Countyno objectings­ale Court petitionso­f Clerk within bondsto have certifying­the14 in days.”been proposed said

not The address actualon a how petition resolution­many wouldsigna­turesdid be necessary bond to issue. stop a second-lien

The minutes, however, showed that there was board discussion about requiring a number equal to 20 percent of the number of voters in the last general election or in the last school election. Education Department staff were reported in the minutes as saying that the 20 percent figure should be used as an indication of opposition “and that a further study might be in order.”

Lori Freno, an attorney for the state Education Department, has said that a petition will not create an automatic bar to a bond issue.

Jim Ross, a former Little Rock School Board member and part of the No Taxation group, said Friday that the petition in opposition to the Little Rock plan to raise $92,055,000 with the second-lien bonds means the district won’t get a “no-petition certificat­e” from the Pulaski County clerk’s office to give to the state Education Board.

“Beyond that, there are no rules,” Ross said. “This is being made up by the Arkansas Department of Education as they go along.”

Humphrey on Friday called it a “major source of concern for us” that state Education Commission­er Johnny Key and Poore have not developed and presented a long-term financial plan for the district. He said a 10-year plan for financing the district’s operation would be useful.

He also called for the return

districta locally Anikaof to the elected Whitfield,the state-controlled­governance­schoola board. member of said of the the stateNo Taxation education group,leaders have done little in the past to communicat­e with district patrons.

“We’re hoping that they will hear from us this time … that we do not want to be ignored. We do not want to be betrayed,” she said.

State Sen. Joyce Elliott, D-Little Rock, who is also active in the No Taxation group, called Key’s recent approval of the Little Rock district’s applicatio­n to issue the second-lien bonds “a process problem.”

Key acts in place of a school board in the state-controlled district.

“There would be no school board in this state that would meet in the evening on a Friday… without talking to the people about what is in progress here. That does not happen in a real democracy, which we do not have anymore,” Elliott said.

 ?? Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/THOMAS METTHE ?? Activist Vicki Hatter (center) voices her concern about the Little Rock School District’s plan to raise the district’s annual debt payment.
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/THOMAS METTHE Activist Vicki Hatter (center) voices her concern about the Little Rock School District’s plan to raise the district’s annual debt payment.

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