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Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Kearney, C. Philip – Journal of Education Finance, 1995
Examines Michigan's attempt to abolish the school property tax and implications for New York State policymakers. Michigan substantially reduced the local property tax for local school operations, adopted a permanent set of tax and revenue limits, and devised a problematic assessment cap. Totally eliminating the local school property tax may be…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Elementary Secondary Education, Finance Reform, Property Taxes
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Strauss, Robert P. – Journal of Education Finance, 1995
Summarizes arguments for and against replacing the local school property tax by a local school income tax. Explores the empirical effects of such policies for New York State. Using a 3% income tax and refashioning state aid to a foundation level of $8,068 per pupil would not require substantial new state revenues. (38 footnotes) (MLH)
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Elementary Secondary Education, Finance Reform, Funding Formulas
Lamitie, Robert E.; And Others – 1981
The partial financing of New York State's public schools with a state-mandated tax coupled with state aid based upon county or regional wealth rather than local district wealth would provide greater equalization of both revenues and expenditures of school districts than does the present law. A comparable increase in state aid appropriations under…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Equalization Aid, Finance Reform, Fiscal Capacity
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
Widerquist, Karl – 2001
New York State's School Tax Relief Aid (STAR) heavily favors wealthier districts, partially reversing equalizing effects that state aid is designed to have. Normally state school aid helps bring less wealthy school districts closer to the standard of wealthier districts. It increases and makes up the lost revenue from taxpayers in the state as a…
Descriptors: Educational Equity (Finance), Educational Finance, Elementary Secondary Education, Finance Reform
New York State Education Dept., Albany. – 1995
This document contains eight articles that offer a nonpartisan evaluation of the pros and cons associated with tax reforms. They were written by members of the Technical Study Group, which was established by the New York State Department of Education in 1994 to examine the generation of revenue for public education. The work of the study group…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Elementary Secondary Education, Finance Reform, Fiscal Capacity
Garms, Walter I. – 1977
This paper attempts both to provide a way of looking at school finance in order to make wiser decisions about it and to discuss some alternative ways to finance the public schools of New York State. The New York school finance system is examined in terms of equity, efficiency, and responsiveness, as are some of the characteristics of the…
Descriptors: Basic Skills, Conference Reports, Educational Finance, Efficiency
New York State Office of the Comptroller, Albany. – 1996
To explore the issue of school finance reform, a series of community forums held across the state were carried out, the results of which are presented. The paper provides some major findings: a basic school finance system already exists, namely, property taxes supplemented by equalized state aid; the magnitude of the school property tax means…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Educational Equity (Finance), Educational Finance, Elementary Secondary Education
Widerquist, Karl – Educational Priorities Panel, 2001
A proposal in the New York State Assembly in 2000 considered eliminating Tax Equalization Aid to school districts in order to fund the elimination of aid caps, called Transition Adjustment. In response to that proposal, this report examines the equalizing or disequalizing effects of three types of New York state aid to school…
Descriptors: State Schools, Tax Rates, Tax Effort, State Aid