Chicago Tribune | Glenbard D87 seeks $35 million for renovations

TUA President Jim Tobin was quoted in a Chicago Tribune article about the Glenbard tax hike.
tribglenbardVoters in the March primary will decide whether Glenbard High School District 87 can borrow $35 million to upgrade its buildings.
If the tax increase is approved, debt will be refinanced so the tax rate will not be increased for the bond and interest fund, school officials said. The homeowner of a $300,000 home, for example, would continue paying about $70 a year toward that fund, officials said. The school district’s total tax bill for the owner of a home of that value would be $2,278.
The money would be used for a number of improvements at the district’s buildings, which range from 42 to 88 years old, school officials said.
“Our four high schools are key venues in the community, not just for our students but for our community events on evenings and weekends,” said Superintendent David Larson. “They’re great, well-used assets, but they’re old and tired.”
In all, the district is planning about $100 million in renovations, which includes upgrades to entrances, building security and mechanical systems, along with renovation of science labs, classrooms and adding greener technology. Two of the four high schools, Glenbard East and Glenbard West, are not fully air-conditioned, Larson said.
“We want a fair, comfortable and equitable environment for all our students. I’ve been in those rooms during a hot day in September and it’s just really uncomfortable.”
During the hottest days of the school year, portable fans are brought in and the shades are pulled down, Larson added. During last year’s heat wave, a teacher last year became dehydrated and had to be hospitalized, he said.
Therese Crawford has two students at Glenbard West High School, which is one of the schools without air conditioning.
“They’d come home saying that it’s upward of 90 degrees in the classroom,” she said. “To come home exhausted with a headache and not being able to drink enough water, there’s no constructive learning on those days.”
Crawford is planning to vote for the tax increase.
And so is John Mulrow, a Wheaton resident who graduated from Glenbard South High School and lives within District 87 boundaries. He doesn’t have children in the district but is an advocate of green technology.
“Just reading about the inefficient air conditioning units and old boilers on site, I’m thinking about the wasted electricity and natural gas being used in those buildings,” he said.
Residents may have seen fliers from a support organization called Glenbard4Kids, which has been actively campaigning for the borrowing plan.
“We feel it’s a fiscally sound approach,” said Steve Garwood, spokesman for the group. “We save money in the long term by issuing bonds now at favorable rates.”
Fliers opposing the referendum have also been distributed, coming from a group called Taxpayers United of America. The group is encouraging voters to reject not only the Glenbard measure, but a number of others on the March ballot.
“We’ve been targeting property tax increase referenda,” said Jim Tobin, president and founder of the group. “If the bonds are paid off, people would get a cut in their property taxes, but these bozos want to preclude the taxpayers from getting a cut. That’s a property tax increase.”
Tobin said he has been knocking on doors and passing out fliers in districts where he opposes ballot issues that would raise taxes.
The district’s existing loans are set to be paid off over the next several years. If new borrowing is not approved, the average homeowner is expected to save an average of about $6 per month, school officials said.
If the measure passes, the renovations will start this year and happen over the next 10 years, Larson said. The more noticeable improvements, including the new air-conditioning, likely won’t happen until summer of 2016.

Daily Herald | Kane County disability tax referendum still seeing opposition

TUA’s work in helping Kane County taxpayers oppose property-tax-increase referenda was featured in the Daily Herald.
dailyheraldkaneAdvocates of a new tax that would provide up to $13 million for Kane County residents with development disabilities are trying to educate the public about exactly how the new tax would work. But just the idea of any additional property tax burden has been enough for the referendum to gain at least one notable opponent.
County voters will decide if they are willing to raise their property taxes by an average of $55 per year on March 18. If voters say “yes,” Kane County will form a developmental disabilities services board, known as a 377 board, to distribute funding to agencies that serve an estimated 20,000 residents with various developmental disability needs.
The board, consisting of up to five unpaid members, would receive funding through a levy authorized by the county board. The levy can’t be zero and can’t be more than 0.1 percent of the equalized assessed value of taxable property in the county.
The money collected, about $13 million if the full cap is levied, would then be distributed among about a dozen nonprofit agencies in the county that provide the services. Funds could also be spent at agencies outside the county, but only for services provided to Kane County residents.
Advocates say the new setup is needed because the current system isn’t providing enough funding to meet the existing needs. Federal and state funds are not increasing, while the number of local residents needing disability services is.
“When these residents turn 18, they are no longer, technically, the responsibility of their parents,” said Pat Flaherty, a board member with the Association for Individual Development. “That means they become a community responsibility. They belong to all of us.”
The nonprofit, one of the service providers for people with developmental disabilities, has pumped more than $100,000 into the referendum campaign. AID also has worked to gain handshake agreements from existing 708 boards to avoid double-taxing residents if the new tax is created.
Townships on the south end of the county and the communities of St. Charles and Geneva already tax their residents to help provide services to developmentally disabled residents, as well as residents with substance abuse or mental health problems.
For example, in 2011, all the existing 708 boards in the county collected about $2.38 million in taxes for those three groups of residents. But only about $370,000 of that went to developmental disabilities needs based on the decisions of those individual boards.
There are no 708 boards on the north end of the county, which is part of the reason why advocates are pushing for a countywide tax. If the new tax is created, the existing boards will sign agreements stating that they will no longer collect funds for developmental disabilities, according to Flaherty. The boards, however, will still collect taxes to help residents with mental health or substance abuse problems.
John Knewitz, former assistant superintendent of schools in St. Charles School District 303, said the new countywide tax is both the easiest and best way to fund services for developmentally disabled residents.
Knewitz, who oversaw special education services in the school district, said bringing 708 or 377 boards to the north end of the county is unlikely. Dissolving all the existing 708 boards in the south and central portions of the county, and then creating one countywide 708 board, would require multiple referendums with uncertain outcomes.
“I don’t see any of those possibilities as being realistic in the foreseeable future,” Knewitz said. “The only solution is what we’re trying to do.”
North Aurora resident Rae Ann McNeilly doesn’t believe that’s true. She is the executive director of Taxpayers United of America and believes developmental disabilities services can and should be funded through charitable donations, not taxes.
“What they are asking for is not a small amount of money when you’re adding to an already huge burden,” McNeilly said. “This is a cause that should be supported through volunteer donations, not through force. If we leave money in taxpayers’ pockets, they will have more money to support charities.”
McNeilly believes the referendum would create a double taxing situation for Kane County residents.
“The majority of the revenue the service providers receive is from the state, so it already comes from taxpayers,” she said. “Instead of this referendum, they should be spending money on hosting private fundraisers.”
The dollar numbers for charity flowing to Flaherty’s AID organization are relatively small. Out of $24.6 million in revenue, only $1.33 million came from charitable contributions, according it is most recent tax statement.
“If there are people who think the tax is too much, we would ask them to turn their attention to the existing county budget and cut true waste in government rather than turning their backs on people whose only contribution to their circumstance was being born,” Flaherty said.

My Suburban Life | District 87 officials, local parent group seek support for $35 million referendum

TUA President Jim Tobin was quoted in a My Suburban Life article about the Glenbard tax hike.
sublifeglenbardGLEN ELLYN – Voters headed to the polls this month in Glenbard Township High School District 87 will be asked to support the issuance of $35 million in bonds to fund facility projects at the district’s four schools.
If approved, the $35 million would extend the district’s bond debt– currently due to expire in Fiscal Year 2026– through Fiscal Year 2039, according to a report prepared by PMA Securities, the district’s financial adviser.
Residents’ tax rates would not increase as a result of the bond issuance, said District 87 Superintendent David Larson.
“What we are asking is to add additional bonds on without any increase to the property tax [rate],” Larson said. “It’s really about investing in our number one asset, which is our students.”
The referendum question will appear on the March 18 election ballot.
Glenbard 4 Kids, a parent-led ballot initiative group formed in December 2013, has been busy rallying referendum support in the communities that make up the four high schools.
“It is needed for infrastructure repairs we believe have to be made to the four Glenbard schools,” Glenbard 4 Kids spokesman Steve Garwood said.
“From a safety, security and educational standpoint, this is for the benefit of the kids,” Garwood said. “Some of the repairs needed would replace mechanical structures that are [about] 50-years-old.”
The $35 million is expected to be used to fund $8 million of projects in summer 2016, $18 million in summer 2017 and $9 million in summer 2018, according to the PMA report.
The district’s Board of Education voted unanimously in November 2013 to place the measure on the ballot.
Along with Glenbard 4 Kids, the League of Women Voters of Glen Ellyn has endorsed the district’s referendum.
However, Taxpayers United of America President and Founder Jim Tobin disagrees with the referendum – and any other ballot initiatives by public school districts seeking to raise taxes.
Instead, the Chicago-based taxpayer group pushes for tax cuts at the local, state and federal level, Tobin said.
“One of the best places to start cutting is to defeat all the property tax increases that are put on the ballot,” said Tobin, adding that there are five other referendums his organization is targeting on the March 18 ballot.
The group has been distributing fliers calling for District 87 taxpayers to vote “no” on the referendum.
“This is nothing more than a money grab by greedy government bureaucrats who will tax everything they can to prop up their own salaries and pensions,” the literature states.
If the referendum is successful, the bonds will support the district’s Master Facility Plan, which includes $100 million of work to be executed during the course of 10 years, a majority of which will include infrastructure improvements and renovations of classrooms, common areas and outdoor spaces.
The district will fund the remaining $65 million of its Master Facility Plan through its Operations and Maintenance budget, which is about $6.5 million per year. The board previously approved issuing bonds to borrow $20 million that will be paid off using that budget.
It is a significant sharing between taxpayers and the District 87 board,” Garwood said.
The Master Facility Plan, reviewed and approved by the Board of Education in December 2011, was developed by Legat Architects of Chicago with input from the district and community members, who participated in several months of focus groups.
A steering committee, comprised of board members, staff, faculty, administrators, students, parents and community members, was also formed to gather feedback.
Legat Architects originally identified $179 million worth of work to be completed during the plan’s 10-year cycle. However, the district scaled the plan back to $100 million after determining that the remaining $79 million of work will be addressed in the following 10 years.

Financial impact to taxpayers
• Board of Education is committed to not increasing Bond & Interest Fund tax rate
• Current Bond & Interest Fund tax rate will be maintained
• The referendum would extend the amount of time taxpayers would pay for capital projects
• The owner of a $300,000 market value home would continue to pay $69 per year

D-87 referendum question
“Shall the Board of Education of Glenbard Township High School District Number 87, DuPage County, Illinois, improve the sites of and alter, repair and equip each of the School District’s four high schools – Glenbard East, Glenbard North, Glenbard South and Glenbard West and issue bonds of said School District to the amount of $35,000,000 for the purpose of paying the costs thereof?”

Know more
For more information on the referendum, visit www.glenbard87.org of follow Glenbard 4 Kids at www.Facebook.com/g4kids or www.twitter.com/glenbard4kids.