The Community Connection

$70M budget includes tax hike

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

LOWER POTTSGROVE » The Pottsgrove School Board Tuesday night unanimousl­y adopted a $70 million preliminar­y budget that, if left unchanged, would raise taxes by 1.5 percent.

But if at least two board members have their way, it will be changed.

Board Vice President Al Leach and board member Bill Parker both made it clear they want to get the tax hike down to 1 percent. They also made it clear that at this point, the only way to get there is by cutting at least one position.

Although Parker said the cut should be an administra­tor, Leach said “that won’t be enough.”

It also became evident during the budget discussion that the move to cut personnel has already progressed to the point that it was discussed in a closeddoor executive session. The Open Meetings Law allows the board to exclude the public from discussion­s about specific personnel.

It also becomes evident that Business Manager David Nestor does not want the tax hike reduced below the proposed 1.5 percent.

School Board President Robert Lindgren said during the operations/facility committee meeting that Nestor “made a plea” to raise taxes this year.

Despite reducing discretion­ary spending every year for the past five years, and posting among the lowest tax rate increase rates in Montgomery County, Pottsgrove has a $2.9 million “structural deficit,” Lindgren said Nestor told his committee.

Over the past five years, Pottsgrove’s tax hike average works out to 0.2 percent, while the Montgomery County average is 2.15 percent, Nester told the committee.

And while the district has recently seen some increased property assessment­s from new housing developmen­ts, Nester said much of that has been offset by assessment challenges mounted by commercial properties.

As it stands, a 1.5 percent tax hike is “not covering expenditur­es,” said Nester. “Going lower at this point, would make the shortfall even worse and cause more risk in the future,” he warned.

Nester said given that school districts are receiving sizeable federal COVID-19 aid packages this year, the convention­al wisdom among school officials is that the state is unlikely to significan­tly increase its subsidy in the coming fiscal year.

Pottsgrove is eligible to receive about $3.7 million in federal aid.

A 1.5 percent property tax hike will add $595,000 to the bottom line — about $68 for a home assessed at $120,000, the district median, according to Nester. A 1 percent hike would generate only $390,000.

Parker suggested that the $200,000 gap could be closed by cutting an administra­tion position. But that was not a decision that could be made in a budget vote, according to district solicitor Marc Davis, who said the vote Tuesday night “is not binding” as the final budget, which the law requires to be adopted by June. 30.

So Parker asked Lindgren to agree to hold another board meeting when the matter of reducing the budget can be further discussed, which Lindgren agreed to do.

 ?? IMAGE FROM SCREENSHOT ?? The April 27Pottsgro­ve School Board meeting was livestream­ed.
IMAGE FROM SCREENSHOT The April 27Pottsgro­ve School Board meeting was livestream­ed.

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