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Philadelphia Mayor Nutter Offers Tough Answers on School Funding

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From The Philadelphia Inquirer:

To find enough money to help the School District of Philadelphia, the city would have to cancel a police academy class, lay off probation officers, and not pay for snow- removal or literacy programs.

Those are just some of the drastic measures the city would have to take to find the $75 million to $110 million Mayor Nutter pledged this week for the cash-strapped schools, according to a letter from Clay Armbrister, his chief of staff.

Armbrister's letter, sent to City Council on Thursday, was an attempt to douse the idea of finding money within the city's budget. Some have suggested giving the schools more money by increasing their share of the property-tax pie. That would occur by shifting the millage rate, which determines how property-tax revenues are divided between the city and the schools.

Several Council members have expressed support for a millage shift, which could provide millions for the schools without affecting taxpayers.

But such a move would take money from the city and "open a painfully large gap in the city's budget," Armbrister wrote.

"The administration believes that a millage shift is not a wise course for the city to pursue," he said.

While Armbrister did not suggest how the city otherwise would raise the money, the administration is trying to move the debate toward some kind of new revenue - a tax increase.

Many Council members, including most of those in leadership, have stated a public opposition to raising taxes.

"I don't understand what the administration position is," Councilman Bill Green said. "They've said what not to do, not what to do."

Nutter pledged to raise money to prevent the school district from making cuts that would devastate full-day kindergarten, transportation services, class size, and alternative schools.

The school district, which gets about 30 percent of its $2.8 billion budget from the city, faces a $629 million deficit for the next fiscal year.

The district also is counting on the state to restore some funding, as well as concessions from the teachers union.

Read more here.

 

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