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Furno, Orlando F. – 1978
If New York State had attempted to raise its tax revenues from 1956 to 1975 entirely without recourse to property taxes, the burden would have had to be shifted to one or more of four other major categories of taxation. This document briefly discusses the impact of two alternatives: how each of the four categories would have been affected by being…
Descriptors: Finance Reform, Property Taxes, Tables (Data), Taxes
Liebschutz, David S.; Schieder, Jeffrey S.; Boyd, Donald J. – 1997
This report, third in a series on education finance, examines U.S. education budgets recently passed by state legislatures and contrasts them with proposed gubernatorial budgets. The generally strong economy allowed state legislatures to increase total state FY 1998 education spending by over $2 billion (1.5 percent) from governors' own proposed…
Descriptors: Budgets, Educational Finance, Elementary Secondary Education, Enrollment Trends
New York State Div. of the Budget, Albany. Education Study Unit. – 1976
The property tax is the single most important revenue source for local governments and school districts in New York State. Its positive attributes are its stability, simplicity, efficiency, predictability, and its contribution to local government. Yet gross inequities are associated with assessment administration of property tax. An analysis of a…
Descriptors: Assessed Valuation, Elementary Secondary Education, Finance Reform, Property Appraisal
New York State Div. of the Budget, Albany. Education Study Unit. – 1977
This report measures the inequities in school taxes on New York State residential property that result from assessment nonuniformity. The index of nonuniformity is a measure of the average percentage difference in school tax bills paid by owners of like residential properties in the same school district but in separate assessing units. Using this…
Descriptors: Assessed Valuation, Elementary Secondary Education, Finance Reform, Measurement Techniques
Lundeen, Virginia; And Others – 1978
This study related tax rate and per pupil revenue to residential assessed valuation, percent residential of total assessed valuation, and selected socioeconomic independent variables for school districts in Cook, DeKalb, DuPage, Kane, and Lake counties in Illinois. Findings suggest that for homeowners and the students of these counties in 1976,…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Equalization Aid, Finance Reform, Multiple Regression Analysis
Thomas, Earl Preston – 1978
Recent analyses of the fiscal impact of New Jersey's Public School Education Act of 1975 have demonstrated that the manner in which education revenues are raised and distributed continues to favor wealthier school districts. While many people believe that most state aid to education funds were allocated to major cities, including Newark, the…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Elementary Secondary Education, Equalization Aid, Expenditure per Student
National Conference of State Legislatures, Washington, DC. – 1976
This report describes and evaluates the record of reform in several states that have revised their school finance systems since 1971. The introductory chapter provides an overview of reform's recent successes, shortcomings, and prospects. Six subsequent chapters offer a close look at its main features. Chapters 2 and 3 analyze new school aid…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Equalization Aid, Finance Reform, Guides
Allen, John C.; Filkins, Rebecca; Cordes, Sam; Jarecki, Eric J. – 1998
This report details results of the 1998 Nebraska Rural Poll, which asked rural Nebraskans their opinions on taxes, school finance, and school consolidation. Survey responses were received from 4,196 residents of Nebraska's 87 non-metropolitan counties. When asked about the tax structure, most respondents favored changing the current distribution…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Finance Reform, Mergers, Property Taxes
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Ladd, Helen F.; Wilson, Julie Boatright – 1982
This paper uses data from a large statewide survey of Massachusetts residents to measure support for Proposition 2 1/2. Proposition 2 1/2 required high tax rate communities to reduce property tax levies 15 percent per year until the tax rate is reduced to the maximum allowable rate of 2 1/2 percent of full and fair market value. Specifically, this…
Descriptors: Community Attitudes, Community Support, Community Surveys, Educational Finance
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Ladd, Helen F.; Wilson, Julie Boatright – 1982
This paper uses data obtained by a large statewide survey of Massachusetts residents to measure the relative importance of certain motivations in influencing the overall statewide vote on Proposition 2 1/2. Proposition 2 1/2 severely restricts the ability of Massachusetts cities and towns to raise tax revenue for local services. Interviews were…
Descriptors: Community Attitudes, Community Support, Community Surveys, Educational Finance
Link, Charles R.; And Others – 1979
In the wake of court decisions in the cases of "Serrano v. Priest,""San Antonio Independent School District v. Rodriguez," and "Robinson v. Cahill," Congress set aside funds as part of Public Law 93-380 for state departments of education to study the equitability of current educational funding arrangements. This…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Court Litigation, Educational Demand, Educational Finance
Berke, Joel S.; And Others – 1975
This document provides background information intended to help in the formulation of educational finance policy at the national level. The first chapter discusses variations in spending within and between states since the 1930s; causes for inequitable and inefficient revenue raising and resource allocation; and differences between states in…
Descriptors: Court Doctrine, Court Litigation, Court Role, Educational Finance