Lawrence schools need help from Legislature for tax deal

Topeka – Lawrence school leaders need legislative help or they will have to ask voters for a tax increase in April.

The situation has flummoxed Lawrence school Supt. Randy Weseman.

“It seems crazy to force a school district to continue to raise taxes in order to keep the money coming in from the previous year,” Weseman said Tuesday.

Not only crazy, Weseman added, but confusing, and possibly costly.

As part of the $466 million, three-year school funding increase approved last year, the Legislature allowed 18 districts to increase taxes for teacher salaries and other expenses to compensate for higher housing costs. Lawrence was one of those districts.

To qualify for those funds, the district had to increase its local property taxes to the maximum allowed rate, which is 30 percent of the district’s general fund.

The law, however, also increases that maximum rate again this year to 31 percent of the district’s general revenue fund.

To be able to continue collecting those cost-of-living revenues again, the district must raise its local property taxes again. To do that, it must ask the voters’ permission. If voters reject the tax increase, the district will also lose its cost-of-living funds.

Weseman said the district doesn’t want to raise the local property taxes, but must in order to get those cost of living funds, which total nearly $1.3 million.

That is unless the Legislature can change the law.

Several key education senators said they are working on it.

“There are a lot of school districts in the same boat,” said Sen. John Vratil, R-Leawood.

Vratil said he’s hoping for a quick fix, adding, “If it gets bogged down, it will increase the time and expense for school districts to access money for education.”

He said one way to fix the problem is to eliminate the requirement that districts increase their local property taxes to maintain the cost of living funds.

Sen. Jean Schodorf, R-Wichita, and chair of the Senate Education Committee, said she will have a hearing on the bill as soon as it is drafted.