Every politician in Illinois talks a big game when it comes to
property taxes.
Some say those bills are bloated because Illinoisans don’t pay enough in state
income taxes. Others say it’s because the cost drivers behind those bills have
grown wild for years. Just about everyone agrees they’re too high.
Fortunately, lawmakers appeared to have found some common ground on one sensible
step toward property tax relief earlier this year – limiting growth in
administrative spending. But even as soaring property tax bills slide into
mailboxes across the state, House members put the kibosh on reform.
House Bill 4789 wouldn’t cut funding. It wouldn’t cut services. It wouldn’t
change anything about curriculum. It would simply cap growth in administrative
spending that has diverted far too much money away from the classroom.
Specifically, districts would only be able to grow administrative spending each
year up to the rate of growth in the Consumer Price Index or 5 percent,
whichever is less.
The Metropolitan Planning Council produced a report in 2017 that found Illinois
school districts spent $518 per student on “general administration” – the
second-highest total in the nation and more than double the national average.
Despite that high spending, Illinois’ educational outcomes lag the nation.
Illinois needs to rein in its spending on school administration. Poor priorities
are one reason residents aren’t seeing a great return on their investment in
public education, a case in point being Illinois’ glut of school districts,
which too often serve as needless layers of bureaucracy adding little to
classroom success.
Reducing the growth in those administrative costs can help bring down property
tax bills, or at the very least give residents a little more bang for their
property tax buck.
HB 4789 had bipartisan backing. It was introduced by state Rep. Peter Breen,
R-Lombard. Reps. Rita Mayfield, D-Waukegan, and Tom Morrison, R-Palatine, signed
on as chief co-sponsors. And it passed through committee on a unanimous vote.
[to top of second column] |
But on April 27, the House axed the bill, with only
20 members voting yes. Opposition ranged from downstate Republicans
to Chicago Democrats.
The Illinois Statewide School Management Alliance,
which represents administrators who might see their pay hikes take a
hit, opposed the bill. Chicago Public Schools also filed in
opposition. And it was especially disheartening to see the Illinois
Federation of Teachers express opposition. Ballooning management
costs are in direct conflict with teachers’ interests, and it’s not
like IFT members are immune from high property taxes.
So lawmakers can’t bring themselves to vote for a sensible spending
cap like HB 4789 – what relief can they provide homeowners?
How about a massive unfunded mandate that would hike property taxes
immediately?
The day before killing Breen’s bill, the House approved a measure
mandating a $40,000 a year minimum salary for all public school
teachers in Illinois. The vote was 61-38. A handful of House
Republicans voted for it. A handful of House Democrats voted against
it.
That might sound like a righteous proposal for some residents in
Cook and the collar counties. But in Carbondale, for example, the
median household income is just under $20,000, meaning teachers
fresh out of college would make double the typical household from
their first day on the job.
So, in a matter of hours, Illinoisans saw bipartisan opposition to
property tax relief and bipartisan support for higher property
taxes.
As house hunting season heats up, let’s hope they change their tune.
Of course, everything in Springfield is charged in an election year.
But it shouldn’t be too much to ask for the General Assembly to
deliver meaningful steps toward long-needed relief on the biggest
tax we pay.
Click here to respond to the editor about this article |