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  • Indiana Capital Chronicle

    Schools face mounting financial pressures on non-discretionary costs

    By David Marcotte,

    1 days ago
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3ASIBa_0voePv8w00

    Transportation, utilities, and property/casualty insurance, three non-discretionary costs, account for over 75% of the Operations Fund’s total revenue in many school districts. (Getty Images)

    The 37-member Indiana Urban Schools Association, representing approximately one-third of all students in traditional public schools, plays a crucial role in preparing the next generation of Hoosier leaders for employment, enlistment, or higher education. However, like other local entities, school districts across Indiana are facing growing financial pressures, particularly from escalating non-discretionary costs, while trying to balance property tax constraints and meet community expectations.

    Property tax reforms implemented in the early 2010’s, combined with the lingering effects of the 2008 recession, led to a significant reduction in property tax revenue per student from 2010 to 2012. While revenues have rebounded, growing 7.6% annually from 2021 to 2023, the overall growth rate from 2010 to 2023 remains at just 2% per year. This limited recovery has not been enough to fully address the financial restraints many school districts still face when meeting local expectations and providing mandated services like serving special education students.

    From 2010 and 2023, inflation consistently outpaced the revenue growth in Indiana’s schools Operations Fund. While inflation averaged 2.9% annually, Operations Fund revenue grew by 1.5%, eroding purchasing power and making it harder for districts to manage fixed costs and other non-discretionary costs. Non-discretionary costs are services and expenses school districts are obligated to provide and paid for out of the Operations Fund which is funded by local property taxes.

    Election results show Indiana voters mostly supporting school funding referendums

    Transportation, utilities, and property/casualty insurance, three non-discretionary costs, account for over 75% of the Operations Fund’s total revenue in many school districts. In those districts most impacted by property tax caps, these three non-discretionary costs exceed the total revenue generated from property taxes. This forces districts to rely either on referendums, borrowing the money (debt), or transferring dollars from the state-provided Education Fund, which is intended to pay for teacher salaries and benefits. As a result, schools have little room left in their budgets for other critical needs such as student support services, building maintenance, technology upgrades and preparing to meet the demands of a new diploma structure.

    Compounding these challenges are the increasing costs associated with the Debt Service Fund, also funded by local property taxes. Inflation in construction and capital outlay costs has driven school construction expenses up by 5.5% annually, yet debt service revenue has only grown by 2.6% per year since 2010. This gap places additional strain on school district budgets as they struggle to manage both existing facilities and future capital projects.

    As lawmakers prepare to consider property tax reform , Indiana’s schools around the state are navigating an increasingly difficult financial landscape while meeting the demands of their local community. The rapid rise in non-discretionary costs restricts schools’ ability to invest in critical areas such as technology, infrastructure, and student services at a time when new diploma requirements are being rolled out. As essential costs continue to rise, Indiana’s school corporations are forced to dedicate a growing portion of their budgets to cover these unavoidable expenses. With little flexibility for discretionary spending, there is an urgent need for financial strategies that address these structural challenges so schools can continue to prepare students to serve their communities and shape Indiana’s future.

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    Comments / 36
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    Randy Wallace
    4h ago
    I am always amazed at how the overpriced insurance companies don't get the number one hit they deserve for being crooks. If they don't make 200% profit they say they are loosing money. They see schools as easy picking for taxpayers money.
    Deb Baker
    9h ago
    I don't understand why every kid in school from 1st grade on has to have their own school laptop/tablet? whatever happened to school books and book rent from using the same texts for maybe 4 or 5 years? I'm sure they think those are necessities now but they're not. kids now don't even have text books to bring home to study or review or work ahead. I understand the desire for students to learn to use computers and utilize new technology but, those could be classes they could start at the end of elementery school and then get into more technical classes in high school. I'm sure that would save more money than they could imagine. as more students are failing in reading and math nowadays, I feel that they aren't even doing what needs done in schools. kids are pushed into using technology and at the same time being robbed of being taught the most important, fundamental classes that are the backbone of their entire 12 years of education.
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