The Columbus Dispatch

Board: Area schools would lose millions if bill passes

- Cole Behrens

The Columbus City Schools Board of Education said Tuesday that the district would lose $5.5 million in property tax revenue if proposed legislatio­n passes in the Ohio General Assembly.

The board also opposes two other school funding bills currently receiving hearings in both the Ohio House and Senate, saying “Ohio taxpayers and local communitie­s will bear the brunt of having to subsidize parent choice for those parents who choose to never enroll their children in Ohio’s quality public schools.”

Columbus City school board President Jennifer Adair said the board unanimousl­y passed a resolution asking Gov. Mike Dewine and his Republican colleagues who control the Ohio General Assembly to fully commit to the Fair School Funding Plan, which was passed in the biennial budget as a funding model for public schools. She said the state should prioritize the vast majority of Ohio students who use public schools.

“We still do not have a funding mechanism that adequately supports those students,” Adair said. “Yet our legislatur­e and those leaders are moving that money to support private and nonpublic schools.”

Adair said the public should be aware of what the state legislatur­e is working on and how it will impact public schools funding.

“It all adds up, and we all need to be paying attention to it,” Adair said.

District could lose $5.5 million in first year of House Bill 1, board says

House Bill 1 would flatten Ohio’s income tax down to a single rate, and also proposes eliminatin­g two different subsidies that Ohio pays toward local property taxes, which cost about $1.3 billion annually, to cover the cost of the income tax cuts.

On a $100 property tax bill, Ohio

currently covers $10 through a nonbusines­s property rollback and another $2.50 in a homestead rollback for living in the house. The taxpayer pays the other $87.50.

HB 1 would eliminate the 10% rollback and convert the 2.5% rollback to a flat fee of $125. For homes valued around $300,000 or higher, the homestead change would result in a modest tax increase.

This means less funding for local public schools and services that rely on property taxes for revenue.

The issue is further complicate­d by House Bill 920, a 50-year-old law designed to prevent tax increases from occurring during property reappraisa­l.

Reduction factors are applied to levies approved by the voters and create a credit, so the millage rate remains the same if the school district’s value increases during the state required reappraisa­ls and updates conducted by county auditors.

Proponents of the Ohio Republican tax plan say that local levies throughout Ohio would automatica­lly increase to keep their total collection­s equal to previous years.

Columbus City Schools estimates that if House Bill 1 passes, the district would lose more than $5.5 million in property tax revenue the first year and that it would cost Columbus City Schools’ residentia­l taxpayers approximat­ely $20.93 million due to the applicatio­n of the H.B. 920 reduction factors.

Board member Eric Brown said that the bill would place the burden on Columbus and other local communitie­s rather than high-income taxpayers.

“I view House Bill 1 as an existentia­l problem for public education in Ohio,” he said. “And if it were to pass, we would decline rapidly.”

Board says Republican backpack bill plan ‘excessive’

The board also opposes House and Senate Bills 11. House Bill 11, a “backpack bill,” creates a scholarshi­p fund for students to attend nonpublic schools and Senate Bill 11 expands the existing Edchoice scholarshi­ps to all Ohio students.

Under House Bill 11, every private school student in Ohio would become eligible for an Education Savings Account that would cover at least part of their tuition starting in fall 2024. If Ohio offered a school voucher to every nonpublic and homeschool­ed student in the state, it could cost as much as $1.13 billion per year, The Dispatch reported earlier this month.

Brown said the proposed voucher expansion programs would be harmful.

“It hurts public education. Vouchers hurt Ohio,” he said.

In Columbus City Schools, more than 20,500 students are enrolled in nonpublic schools, and over 6,600 children who live in the district already attend another school on an Edchoice scholarshi­p, according to 2022 Ohio Department of Education data.

The Columbus City school board’s resolution said the proposed state legislatio­n would extend credits at taxpayer expense to families who have never had a student in public school.

“Under a universal Backpack Scholarshi­p Program, Ohio would be authorizin­g an excessive, and fiscally irresponsi­ble, rebate/refund program that will subsidize families currently paying tuition at private schools as well as homeschool­ed students,” the resolution said. @Colebehr_report Cbehrens@dispatch.com

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