ambassadors

The District Ambassadors explored a timely topic this month - finances. Ongoing discussions about a proposed 10 cent tax increase to fund facilities improvements throughout Carroll County Schools was a large part of the discussion.

Chief Financial Officer Jon Conrad debunked several incorrect statements floating around social media and gave a financial perspective of why some suggestions simply will not work.

Ambassador Deidra Hays asked Conrad to explain how much the district would lose if it lowered the 66.5 cents per $100 assessed valuation tax rate that is currently in place. The key piece to that answer centers around the recallable increase, in this case a proposed 10 cent increase. Itā€™s called a recallable increase because citizens can collect signatures and force it to a public vote, which could reverse (recall) the decision made by the board of education.

ā€œWe canā€™t just reallocate money from the general fund portion of the tax rate into the building fund,ā€ Conrad said. ā€œYou donā€™t get the state match by not passing a recallable nickel. If we just switch money, weā€™re missing out on free money.ā€

ambassadorsMore importantly, Conrad said it would not be fiscally responsible to make such a change. ā€œI canā€™t responsibly take that money from the general fund. This is not just a one-year change, itā€™s for every year,ā€ he said. Bonds are sold for 20-year terms so the money to repay those bonds must be available for 20 years.

Superintendent Casey Jaynes added that reducing the current rate by 12 cents would equate to $1.2 million a year in lost income from the general fund. ā€œThatā€™s the equivalent of 23 starting teachers,ā€ Jaynes said, adding that is not a sustainable loss.

Conrad emphasized that enacting recallable rates is the only way to receive a state-funded match. If Carroll County approved a 10 cent recallable increase, the state match would be $917,744 in the 2025-2026 school year. That would compound over 20 years, leaving the district with a bonding potential of $37 million.

ā€œThe only way you get to $37 million is the state matching funds. The only way you get the matching funds is to do a recallable nickel,ā€ Conrad said.

ambassadorsCarroll County is one of 44 districts in the Commonwealth that have only one nickel, which was required by state law in the 1990ā€™s.

ā€œWe have to look forward to the future of our families,ā€ Ambassador Linda Davis said. ā€œI have grandkids growing up and I hope they stay here like my kids did.ā€

Superintendent Jaynes emphasized that facilities improvement is an investment in Carroll Countyā€™s children and the community as a whole. ā€œIf we donā€™t do something different, your grandchildren will leave,ā€ he said. ā€œThe whole point of this is to keep people here and attract people who want to work here and live here.ā€

Conradā€™s presentation can be viewed with this link. Finance Ambassador Presentation