Saturday, August 6, 2011

Maximum property tax hike sought for Chicago public schools

Public hearings on the budget are scheduled Aug. 10, 11 and 12, and school board members will vote on the spending plan Aug. 24.

FY 2012 Public Budget Hearings will be held at:

  • Wednesday, August 10, 2011:  Lane Technical High School, 2501 W. Addison, 7pm.
  • Thursday, August 11,2011:  Westinghouse High School, 3223 W. Franklin, 7pm.
  • Friday, August 12, 2011:  Simeon High School, 8147 S. Vincennes, 7pm.
To View the FY 2012 Budget:
http://cps.edu/about_CPS/Financial_Information/Pages/FYBudget2012.aspx

Maximum property tax hike sought for Chicago public schools - Chicago Sun-Times

BY ROSALIND ROSSI
Chicago property taxes that fund schools would be raised to the maximum allowed by law for the first time in four years — costing the average homeowner an extra $84 a year — under a proposed Chicago Public School budget released Friday.

To fill a $712 million deficit, the first budget outlined by Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s new school team would hike property taxes by $150.3 million, cut spending by $320.7 million, and use $241 million in reserve dollars to keep the system in the black.

Faced with rising costs and the evaporation of one-time federal dollars, the budget marks the second year in a row that CPS plans to spend more than it takes in, a pattern experts call “unsustainable.’’ And, CPS officials concede, even grimmer days await three years from now, when a pension contribution waiver expires and the system’s pension tab will skyrocket.

Under the $5.9 billion spending plan, teachers and other union workers will lose a scheduled four percent cost-of-living increase worth $100 million, although three-quarters of teachers should get a raise of 1 percent to 5 percent for other reasons, officials said.

High schools are expected to give up 140 of a total 200 police officers, receiving $25,000 in cash for every cop they agree to forgo — a fraction of what CPS now pays for each officer. Thousands of kids could lose after-school clubs in math, science and technology. Seven schools with struggling would-be freshmen are losing funding for extra staff. Even elite college prep high schools will lose money for some positions.
Central office and middle-level management also will take a hit, although CPS officials and a consultant are still in the process of identifying how they will achieve $107 million in planned trims in those areas. But based on a month of work so far, said CPS Chief Administrative Officer Tim Cawley, officials believe there’s lots of overlapping responsibilities between departments that are ripe for the budget axe.
Hundreds of layoffs are expected, but CPS had no specifics on Friday. Officials said at least 400 schools can avoid staff or program cuts by using discretionary money they have yet to spend.

The good news for parents is the spending plan will not raise class size in most schools, as was threatened last year. It manages to add 6,000 more all-day kindergarten spots and 2,300 new magnet ones.
Lise Valentine of the Civic Federation said she thinks most taxpayers will understand the need to raise property taxes to the max, adding an average of $84 in taxes to a typical Chicago home worth $250,000.
“I think they can understand the prioritization of class size and of trying to keep as many teachers as they can,’’ Valentine said.

“[Former Mayor] Daley wouldn’t be able to get away with that [kind of tax hike],’’ said Barbara Radner of DePaul University’s Center for Urban Education. But Emanuel “is so early in his reign, and had such a mandate, I think he’s the one person who can carry this off.’’

However, in some ways, Radner said, the spending plan is “going in the wrong direction.’’ Despite Emanuel’s public lobbying for a longer school day and year, the budget trims money for afterschool clubs and reduces by half the money allocated to “community schools” that offer after-school programs to both students and community members. In addition, it provides no additional money to pay for a longer school day or year.

Chicago Teachers Union President Karen Lewis said the budget’s $87 million in school programming cuts will be “bad for kids.’’ In particular, she predicted that the elimination of a cushion of one or two extra positions for those schools who loose more enrollment than expected will lead to more split classes in elementary schools and fewer class choices in high schools.

The budget seemed to favor charter schools often touted by Emanuel over neighborhood schools, a “troubling’’ picture, Lewis said. CPS officials say charter schools took a four percent cut in funding last year, and to cut deeper this year would mean carving into core programs, rather than just the supplemental ones that are getting trimmed in neighborhood schools.

Public hearings on the budget are scheduled Aug. 10, 11 and 12, and school board members will vote on the spending plan Aug. 24.

23 comments:

  1. Where will the public hearings be held?

    The school board, a group of APPOINTED elitists will be making the decisions about the CPS budget - NOT THE ELECTED ALDERMEN.

    Makes my blood boil, especially because of the criminal mishandling of taxpayer money that has occurred in the past to the tune of $800,000 during one year (spent on parties, gifts and travel).

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  2. I don't mind paying an extra $84.00/year in property taxes for CPS, if I could be assured the money would benefit the schools in the 41st ward, DIRECTLY! The schools in the 41st are overcrowded and in need of much attention. Parents like me are tired of fundraising.

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  3. I attended the last LSC meeting at Taft High School, as I have a son attending who is a Junior. It was the first LSC meeting I attended and I learned that Taft High School has been consistently underfunded for improvement projects and other programs compared to other CPS high schools.

    It will be very important for parents of students who live on the Northwest side of Chicago to attend one of the CPS budget meetings to speak out loudly about the disparity in funding for schools in the 41st (Northwest side).

    I'm tired of paying high property taxes and learning that my money isn't going to support local schools, and that we are purposely not given upgrade money for our schools. And the overcrowding is unexceptable.

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  4. Why is there a seperate budget for CPS governed by a school board? Why do we elect aldermen if they aren't allowed to govern? The mayor controls the school board, and the school board approved the budget with the mayor. SO once again the mayor circumvents working with elected officials who are directly accountable to the voters.

    WE NEED AN ELECTED SCHOOL BOARD or a mechanism that allows the alderman some control of the CPS budget.

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  5. I don't mind paying extra money for education, but I want to see some return in my own neighborhood. I am going to try to go to the meeting at Lane.

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  6. Why not use TIF monies? Money in the TIF funds should be used to develop & expand community minds, not developers bank accounts

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  7. Margareita VelasquezAugust 6, 2011 at 10:49 PM

    Rahm just said that he wouldn't raise taxes LAST WEEK! Property taxes are taxes Rahm!

    Why don't you get rid of a layer of politically appointed "management", FIRST!

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  8. My property value has gone way down, but my property taxes are going up???????????????

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  9. Rahm did say no tax increases last week, and then this week wants a property tax increase that will avaerage about $84.00 per household (translated to $170.00 for those of us in the 41st ward).

    ABSOLUTELY SICK AND TIRED OF PAYING PROPERTY TAXES AND GETTING NOTHING BACK FROM CPS - AND HAVING TO SEND MY OWN KIDS TO PRIVATE SCHOOLS.

    I'm going to be voting with my feet very soon...am walking away from Chicago.

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  10. I want to see a full forensic audit before I pay one more dime in taxes.

    Why isn't TIF money being used to bolster the schools? Earmarked for big business, that's why.

    Why not tax the rich who use us and this city? (Lollapoluza tax exempt, for example. Another Daley fix for family and friends)

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  11. Why do people expect Rahm to clean up the pig sty Daley left behind by Labor Day?

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  12. I don't have kids in CPS schools anymore, but if you are a parent with a kid in local schools, you better go to one of the public hearings on the CPS budget and scream bloody murder. Let me assure you, bus loads of parents from the south and west side will show up at the west and south side hearings and they will be heard and receive what they want.

    The north side parents are to complacent - need to learn to scream and yell to get anything for local schools.

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  13. Will Alderman O'Connor attend the public hearing at Lane Tech on 8/10? she said she would be our voice with CPS, so lets HEAR IT Alderman O'Connor.

    If I see you there, I will come and sit with you and whatever contingency from the 41st Ward shows up.

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  14. What happened to the longer school day? No way Rahm shoulda promised that looking at the CPS budget. And the loss of after school programs/clubs that keep kids safe and off the street? That makes no sense either.

    There is no money, I get that, but I don't see it. Rahm has been verbalizing that he is improving government transparency, but yet no published audits of spending in the past 5 years. How are we suppose to know where to cut if there is no published history of how current/past money has been spent.

    Screw alliances to Daley - publish a forensic audit, and let the chips fall where they may (hopefully a fed indictment of daley and his minions who ripped off the city for decades).

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  15. And, I hope Alderman O'Conner goes to the CPS public meeting too. She might not be able to do much, but being there with a couple ward parents would send a strong message to the school board: North side short changed for to long!

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  16. I just looked for the Alderman's website to see if she is organizing parents for the CPS meeting and there is no website and no announcements.

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  17. taxpayers need to go to these meetings! Squeeky wheel get attention!

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  18. a forensic audit isn't going to happen. All dem city council and a mega dem mayor, in addition to the former corrupt mayor having a brother in the white house.

    No official will touch daley, bet on it.

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  19. The sad part of all this, the Northwest side will end up paying the most in property tax increases for the CPS budget, but will receive the least.

    And, sadder, yet, I'm willing to wager no one from the Northwest side will show up to the public CPS budget meetings to say anything about the increase and the spending disparities & overcrowding that continue to plague the northwest side schools.

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  20. I'm totally disgusted

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  21. Seems like Brizard has done everything except lead by example ad cut his own salary.

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  22. I will be there

    ~ CPS parent from Edison Park

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  23. Dateline Chicago.....Mayor holds impromptu press conference at Grand Opening of new Chase Bank building on NW side.......

    Mayor Emanual and Chase Bank CEO Thurston Poupon appeared at the grand opening of the new Chase Bank Tuesday morning, announcing Chase would hire 400 new employees at 4 new Chase banks throughout the city. After making their joint announcement, the Mayor and CEO took questions from the media:

    Mr. Mayor, how many of the 400 new hires will be citizens of Chicago?

    Mayor: Few, if any. Most new hires will come from my home town of Winnetka.

    Mr. Mayor, it seems you can't go 2 blocks without seeing a couple of banks as it is. Do we really need more banks?

    Mayor: Care to answer that one Thurston?

    CEO Poupon: The reason for so many banks is to remind you riff-raff just who is in charge. Don't you forget it, or we'll stomp on your neck even more.

    At that point the press conference was disrupted by loud popping sounds. Police and security personnel hustled the Mayor and CEO away from the podium. Thankfully both men reappeared minutes later when police determined the popping sounds were caused by the opening of champagne bottles in the CEOs' limo. The questions continued....

    Mr. Mayor, is it true the street names will be changed where the new Chase banks emerge?

    Mayor: I'm glad you reminded me. It is true. This street will be renamed 'Derivatives Way.'

    Mr. Poupon, sir, just what is a derivative?

    CEO Poupon: We're not quite sure, but we made a killing on them.

    Mr. Mayor, did Chase bank receive a tax break as an incentive to open their 4 new offices?

    Mayor: Of course, because as you all know by now, tax cuts increase job growth-as well as increase government revenue.

    Mr. Mayor, prior to you election to Congress several years ago, you made 16 million dollars in 4 years as an investment banker. Is that why you are so fond of bankers?

    Mayor: Remember what John Dillinger said years ago when asked, "Why do you rob banks?" "Because that's where the money is." There's your answer. I got time for just one more question - I'm running late, gotta make a man-of-the-people appearance at a bowling alley or someplace.

    Mr. Mayor, instead of raising everyone's property taxes to fund CPS, why not reform TIF? After all, there is more than 800 million dollars in that fund....

    Mayor: Isn't it obvious? A. Because it's a good idea. B. Because the head of the Teachers Union proposed it. Gotta go now.

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