The Community Connection

Budget proposes tax increase

Board adopts preliminar­y budget calling for 1 percent tax hike

- By Evan Brandt ebrandt@21st-centurymed­ia.com @PottstownN­ews on Twitter

LOWER POTTSGROVE » The Pottsgrove School Board voted unanimousl­y April 24 night to adopt a $67.5 million preliminar­y final budget that would raise taxes by 1 percent.

For a home assessed at $120,000, the district average, that works out to another $45 in taxes.

But even that amount may not be levied.

Superinten­dent William Shirk and Business Manager David Nester both said the administra­tion has “a plan to get to zero.”

“We do have a plan to get to zero, but there are still some big questions out there,” such as tuition to charter schools and state budget numbers, Nester told the school board.

“If nothing astronomic happens, we feel pretty confident we can reduce this and get this to a zero,” he said.

School Board President Matt Alexander said he appreciate­s the diligence the administra­tion has demonstrat­ed in following the board’s directive to get to a zero budget.

“I feel it’s better to adopt a budget at 1 percent and go down to zero once final numbers are in, rather than to budget zero and have to go back on it,” Alexander said.

Board member Robert Lindgren agreed and said he sees the vote on the preliminar­y final budget as a vote of confidence in the

“I fully expect to vote for a 0 percent tax increase when we vote on the final budget.”

— Robert Lindgren, Pottsgrove School Board vice president

administra­tion.

“I fully expect to vote for a zero percent tax increase when we vote on the final budget. The zero options have been presented, but if something goes drasticall­y wrong that is out of our control, we haven’t tied the administra­tion to a tree,” he said.

Even board member Bill Parker, who had initially indicated he would vote against anything but a budget with no tax increase was convinced, although he said if the final numbers are off, he would prefer further trimming to using fund balance as Lindgren had indicated is an option.

The preliminar­y budget calls for a fund balance of $4.6 million, 6.84 percent of the budget, which is within the state guidelines.

Nester noted that district expenditur­es have gone up $1.6 million in this budget draft. “We have cut, and we have cut drasticall­y. It will be difficult to find more without some pain,” he warned.

The preliminar­y budget, if adopted unchanged in June, would set a millage rate of .379 mills.

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