Voters
will hopefully head to the polls today, May 21 to vote either for or against
their school district budgets – all within the tax cap that “Governor Tappan Zee” enacted into a permanent tax cap, proposed bonds and of course, School Board races.
We have been following the Greenburgh school board race which features six
candidates. Two are incumbents and four are new faces. While all of the
candidates seem to be very nice people, we were most impressed with Tanya
Dragic.
Multi-million-dollar
bond proposals will be voted on in four school districts - Briarcliff Manor,
Irvington, Pleasantville and Somers. Whether or not there are tax implications
from them remains to be seen. Most people are inclined to go along with tax
increases if the are logical, within reason financially, adequately explained
and communicated to the public clearly. After all, this is their money that’s
being sought.
In
this day of instant news feeds, 24-hour cable news, neighborhood blogs such as
this one, podcasts, radio and residents talking amongst themselves, taxpayers
(stakeholders) need to feel assured that their money is being well spent and
with meaning. This was not the case with the recent $114 million bond the
School Board and Dr Chase tried to foist upon the public in the 11th hour two months ago. They got their heads handed to them with a two-to-one
defeat.
The
take-away that the Board members and Dr Chase seemed to believe is that they
did a poor job communicating their “vision” to the stakeholders. If that’s all
they got out of this defeat, they really aren’t paying attention. What they
also did was hide information. They repeatedly told the public that the $114
million was including interest. It was not. The interest alone would have been
almost the face value of the note, coming in at $83 million. With a bond total
of $197 million, and the yearly budget of $71 million ($70,752,506 actual),
taxpayers will be on the hook for $267 million! In Mandarin, it’s 2.67亿美元!
When
asked why the bond should be supported, we were told that the Bailey and Highview
schools were in such disrepair that we needed to jettison them as soon as
possible and build two new schools to replace them – at the Warburg campus.
When asked why, one School Board trustee had the backbone to tell us, “The Board
made a conscious decision to not maintain the schools to save teacher’s jobs.
Others on the Board believed having all the schools on one campus would be their School Board legacy – as did
Dr Chase. Sadly, their legacy will be the disrepair of our schools.
While
this revelation was a stunning admission, the honesty and openness of the Board
member was refreshing and what a dialog should be. During the entire event the
age-old mantra was, “Do it for the children.” In fact, on a community gossip
board, several residents kept posting to vote yes for the bond and saying those
against it were lying with the facts they presented. They were not. But for
Phil, Matty, Mona and a handful of others aligned with the School Board supporting a radical tax increase, many could or would not go along! Can they be persuaded to vote for it now? We’ll see...
The
budget vote is upon us, with a small cheerleading crowd in the gossip sites
trying desperately to convince those gullible enough to not learn the facts on
their own to vote for the budget. When a question was posed on the site if
Matty worked for the district and if he ever ran for the School Board, the
conversation was closed down. Apparently, just as in Town Hall and the School
Board, the flow of information works only one-way. It's ironic that after 3,000 people mobilized and voted "no" that the Board did not capitalize on the obvious interest of the public.
Briarcliff
Manor’s $3 million bond proposal would include a roof replacement at the middle
school, a track resurfacing, and infrastructure improvements district-wide.
Irvington would see renovation projects, conservation initiatives, expansions
and modernization efforts. Pleasantville will make repairs to school buildings,
increase security, and asbestos abatement in school floors. Somers seeks to
increase security, and if approved, would include a partial roof replacement at
Primrose Elementary School.
These districts clearly show it is possible to do ongoing repair and maintenance without financially hammering the
district residents. Those that can afford it will scrutinize the budget less
than those who cannot. We need a Board that understands that it's our money and then their money and that it doesn't grow on trees. The current Greenburgh
School Board and its Superintendent seem oblivious to this. Again, they’re not
listening. In the Fairview Fire and the Hartsdale Fire Districts, 48% and 42%
respectively are tax exempt. That means about half of the taxpayers are paying
double of what they should have to to compensate for the tax exempt properties who still utilize their services. The school district suffers from the same
malady with little recourse.
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