District threatened by more money woes
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-- Deirdre Newman
As the Newport-Mesa Unified School District contemplates a potential
$1.3-million deficit from midyear budget cuts, a larger financial threat
is looming on the horizon.
The district could lose millions because of a questionable practice by
county assessors that was found to violate Proposition 13.
The practice, called recapturing, involves increasing property
assessments above the legal 2% a year mandated by Proposition 13 to
compensate for a decrease in property values.
Last month, Judge John Watson declared the practice unconstitutional.
On Monday, the Orange County Board of Supervisors directed the county
counsel not to appeal the ruling, meaning districts throughout the county
could lose $94 million in the first year the decision is implemented..
Newport-Mesa would be hit hard because it receives a majority of its
funding from property taxes, Assistant Supt. Mike Fine said.
But it’s still too early to even approximate the size of the fiscal
effect, Fine added.
The county would have to give back an extra $285 million in property
taxes paid between 1998 and 2001 if the 2% limit is applied retroactively
to all property owners, according to an analysis by Orange County
Auditor-Controller David Sundstrom.
Watson still must decide whether he will enlarge his original ruling
to class-action status.
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