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Seastone, D. A. – 1972
If the property tax in Alberta becomes more restricted to the financing of property services, educational program budgets can look to federal, provincial, and local sources of incremental and replacement revenues. At the federal level, unconditional grants might be appropriate, similar to the 50-percent of operating costs grants now used for…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Equal Education, Federal Aid, Federal State Relationship
Bird, R. M.; Slack, N. E. – 1978
A review of the property tax system of financing education in Ontario provides historical background for the consideration of alternative approaches to reform. The problem of declining enrollment lends a sense of immediacy to the discussion. The present system of finance is found to be unsatisfactory because of inequities in property assessment…
Descriptors: Assessed Valuation, Declining Enrollment, Elementary Secondary Education, Finance Reform
Fennell, Brian H. – 1991
Fiscal equity and taxation equity in educational finance have been key issues in the United States and Canada over the past 2 decades. Part 1 describes the Province of Alberta's search for a solution to fiscal and taxation equity by looking at the education funding system. The growing disparities in educational resources available to school…
Descriptors: Educational Equity (Finance), Educational Finance, Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries
Cameron, David M. – 1978
This paper seeks a plan for financing education in Ontario that minimizes the disruptive effects of declining enrollment and changing enrollment patterns, is sensitive to the limitation of resources, and provides clear channels of authority and responsibility between citizen and policy maker. The author considers the alternatives for placing the…
Descriptors: Boards of Education, Declining Enrollment, Educational Finance, Educational Policy
Rideout, E. Brock – 1978
Using statistical data, this paper analyzes methods for educational finance in Ontario that provide alternatives to present fiscal inequalities. There are currently five barriers to equity: the lack of directly comparable measures of local tax-paying ability, the extremes in unit equalized assessment caused by the large number of school…
Descriptors: Assessed Valuation, Boards of Education, Declining Enrollment, Elementary Secondary Education