State Lawmakers Offer No Relief as Suburban School Districts Continue to Impose Tax Hikes

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Image of an Abington School Board meeting via Tom Gralish, Philadelphia Inquirer.

With no fix forthcoming from state lawmakers, suburban school districts continue to impose annual tax hikes on property owners that drastically outstrip earnings growth, writes Maria Panaritis for the Philadelphia Inquirer.

A recent analysis found that over the last decade, “school property taxes in the 60-plus districts in Bucks, Chester, Delaware, and Montgomery counties have jumped 25 percent, — in some cases better than 40 percent — outpacing inflation while enrollments have been stagnant.”

But school boards are doing this for good reasons.

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Close to 70 percent of school budgets are covered through local taxes, but the state only provides around 30 cents of every dollar needed. Four decades ago, the split between school districts and the state was equal.

Meanwhile, labor costs have gone up with unfunded mandates providing unique instruction for special-needs children, together with skyrocketing healthcare and pension costs worsening the situation.

To make up for this, districts have been increasing local taxes, while forgoing building renovations and other necessary improvements.

Read more about the tax increases in the Philadelphia Inquirer by clicking here.

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