RTHS Board: County schools facilities sales tax to be on March ballot

Library media center improvements discussed

Jeff Helfrich
Posted 12/18/23

At its monthly meeting Monday, the Rochelle Township High School District Board of Education unanimously approved a resolution in support of placing a county facilities sales tax on the March 19 election ballot.

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RTHS Board: County schools facilities sales tax to be on March ballot

Library media center improvements discussed

Posted

ROCHELLE — At its monthly meeting Monday, the Rochelle Township High School District Board of Education unanimously approved a resolution in support of placing a county facilities sales tax on the March 19 election ballot.

A law passed in 2007 to allow for a county-wide sales tax in Illinois to benefit schools for expenses including facilities, security, mental health services and school resource officers. The sales tax must pass in a county by referendum during an election. That has not taken place in Ogle County, and the measure failed on the ballot locally back in 2013. There are 57 counties in Illinois that have the county schools facilities sales tax.

Shared Rochelle School Districts Superintendent Jason Harper said that there has been enough support from school boards county wide for the referendum to be placed on the ballot. To get onto the ballot, school boards representing more than 50 percent of students must pass support resolutions. The referendum would have to pass on the ballot county-wide. The sales tax can be a maximum of one percent in quarter-percent increments. The Rochelle Elementary School District Board of Education passed a resolution to support the item being placed on the ballot at its Dec. 12 meeting.

The additional sales tax would apply to items that are already taxed, with the exception of vehicles and unprepared food. Based on the most recent numbers, a county facility sales tax could net RTHS $443,491 per year. Along with facilities, security, mental health services and school resource officers, the money can be used to abate property taxes and make rates lower for property owners within the district.

Board members stressed Monday that the resolution was only to give the choice to voters, and not in support of the tax itself.

"What we'd like to do is just offer the referendum to the taxpayers to make a decision," Board President Tom Huddleston said. "If it should pass, as far as our district is concerned, we can then consider abating all that money towards real estate taxes if the board wishes or make any other decision. Any other district can do that as well. Tonight's proposal is just to put it on the referendum."

Harper said there hasn't been unanimous approval among county school districts, but there was enough support to get it on the ballot as of Dec. 18.

"It's support for our community voters so they can go to the ballot box and vote on whether or not they want to continue with what we've been doing historically in terms of property taxes funding the local portion of schools, or offset that to some degree by a sales tax initiative,” Harper said.

LMC

Harper provided an update on planned renovations to the library media center (LMC) at RTHS. Due to recent changes in the way students consume media and the LMC not seeing any changes since the school was built in 2004, the school's administration and LMC staff desire to make improvements to the area.

The improvements would take place in 2025, and District Business Manager Kevin Dale estimated that the cost could be "a few hundred thousand dollars. The district will soon be meeting with engineers to get a better idea of costs.

Changes would include more open and flexible space in the LMC along with a podcast/tech center.

"In the last 20 years, the uses of an LMC have changed quite a bit with technology and flexible work space," Harper said. "There's just the real fact that there's less tangible, hard copy things that the students are checking in and out. Students and teachers have been surveyed and administration and maintenance staff have provided input."

Levy

The board unanimously approved its 2023 tax levy. Dale said the levy will see a 2.56 percent increase ($260,000) over last year's levy, which did not require the district to hold a truth in taxation hearing due to that number being lower than five percent. Dale said the average property tax bill increase on a $100,000 home is about $24.

The district's equalized assessed value (EAV) saw an 8.9 percent increase overall.