Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

North Little Rock School District to ask for funding

Constructi­on tax increase OK’d for November ballot

- CYNTHIA HOWELL

NORTH LITTLE ROCK — The North Little Rock School Board voted 6-0 Thursday to ask voters at a Nov. 5 election to approve a 4-mill property tax increase to pay for a replacemen­t middle school, a new indoor sports facility and the demolition of some older district and city buildings.

In addition to a $68 million middle school to replace the current middle school campus and an $18 million sports facility, the capital improvemen­t plan envisions spending at least $30 million to repair and renovate the landmark Ole Main building — up from $13 million that was initially proposed.

If approved by voters, the district’s 48.3-mill property tax rate in the 8,000-student district will increase to 52.3 mills.

The possible increase would cost the owner of a $100,000 home an additional $80 a year in school district taxes. The owner of a $200,000 home would pay an additional $160, if a 4-mill tax increase is approved.

A mill is one-tenth of 1 cent. One mill levied on an assessed value of $1,000 yields $1 in property taxes due. Arkansas counties assess property at 20% of actual value. The assessed value of a $100,000 house is $20,000. That $20,000 multiplied by 0.004 or 4 mills would generate an $80 tax increase.

The four new mills would produce $51,832,478, which would be combined with $44.8 million from other sources. Those additional sources include the district’s building fund, savings from refinanced interest rates on bonds and $20,871,050 from the state’s Academic Facilities Partnershi­p Program.

That total $96,675,589 would cover the campus for grades six through eight, and the indoor sports facility next to the North Little Rock High School. There would also be funds for demolition costs and for contingenc­ies.

The $30 million for improvemen­ts to the Ole Main building would not be conditione­d on receiving state Academic Partnershi­p money. However, if the project attains state approval, there is the potential for as much as $10 million more for the work, Brian Brown, the district’s chief financial officer told the board.

“This puts us in the best scenario,” Superinten­dent Gregory Pilewski said. “We are going to do something with Ole Main. Now if we get some additional state Partnershi­p Program money, great, but it does allow us — if the millage passes — $30 million to invest in Ole Main.”

Scott Beardsley, financial adviser to the board, said the district can generate the $30 million for the historic building by selling bonds and “back-end loading” the debt service payments for those bonds after previously issued bonds are paid off. The payments on the newer bonds will be greater in the later years than initially.

The district is under some time pressure to ask voters for the millage increase for the long-discussed middle school replacemen­t.

The district is approved for $20.8 million in state aid for the project but it must have signed constructi­on contracts for the project by January 2025 or face having the money pulled back and distribute­d to projects in other districts, Brown said. The state gives districts 18 months between approval of state funding and getting signed contracts.

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