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District
94 takes stance on debate over levy amounts
By
Jack Komperda, Daily Herald Staff Writer
Posted November 21, 2007
School board members in West Chicago Community
High School District 94 rejected a measure on Tuesday that,
in effect, could limit the amount of money the district
would seek to levy for next year's budget.
Just three months after approving its first surplus budget
in years, the school board voted to seek an increase of
its $30 million budget for the coming year to not more
than 5 percent.
Area municipalities and taxing bodies routinely propose
tax levies exceeding the amount needed during the course
of the budget process. The final amount is set by the county
clerk's office.
But school board President Tony Reyes and board member
Gordon Cole argued that District 94 should seek a levy
amount lower than the proposed 8 percent increase sought
by school officials.
While District 94 wouldn't get the full amount requested
by school officials, the levy amount essentially asks for
an additional $871,000 for school district coffers.
Reyes and Cole argued that seeking such a high figure
sent a poor message to cash-strapped homeowners.
"To pass this levy amount would send a message to
the taxpayer that we have a desire to take as much possible
from the community," Cole said. "We're asking
for this money without any documentation showing what we
need the money for."
Board member Rich Nagel argued that school officials could
be putting District 94 at a financial disadvantage by having
a lower tax levy amount set by the county.
In August, the school board passed its first budget in
years to start and hopefully end with a surplus.
From 2002 to 2004, the school district's budget deficit
toggled between the extremes of $790,000 and $1.3 million.
In September 2005, when the board passed a budget that
was $1.4 million in the red, members pledged to reel in
spending in fiscal 2006, which they did by cutting 13 teachers
and six assistant coach positions, increasing class sizes
but also reducing the deficit.
"What we're asking for are simply numbers," Nagel
said. "If we ask for less, we're not going to get
the money that's coming to us."
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