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Your 2009-10 School Taxes - Q&A
Many people have questions about their school tax bills we thought readers might appreciate answers to those that are asked most frequently. Are local property taxes the sole source of revenue for the school district? No. The school district’s revenue comes from the local tax levy, from state school aid, from federal grants, from interest income, and from other miscellaneous sources. Local property taxes contribute approximately 37 percent of the district’s total revenue. What is a tax levy? The levy is the total amount of local property taxes collected in support of schools in the district. For 2009-10, the OACSD tax levy is $15,213,403. Is the tax levy the same as the tax rate? No. The tax rate is the amount, per thousand dollars of assessed property value, that each property owner pays on his/her property. How is the amount of the tax levy established? Each year, voters cast ballots for or against a proposed school district budget. Part of that budget proposal is an estimate of the amount of revenue, from all sources, needed to equal the expenditures in the proposed budget. Once the state budget is approved in Do all towns pay the same share of the tax levy? No. There are five towns in the Owego Apalachin district Owego, Tioga, Nichols, In our district, the largest proportion of property value is in the Town of Why do tax rates change from year to year? Tax rates are impacted by (1) the equalization rate (established by New York State to make assessments comparable in townships across the state); (2) by changes in the assessed value of taxable property in each town; and (3) by the total amount of the tax levy to be collected in support of that year’s school district budget. The interplay of these factors each year determines the tax rate for each town. |
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