School
districts
face
more
cutbacks
By
Cece
Todd
and
Le
Templar
Tribune
March
19,
2003
East
Valley
school
districts
already
laying
off
staff
and
canceling
programs
now
face
millions
of
dollars
in
new
cuts
this
year
as
the
Legislature
narrowly
ordered
them
to
roll
back
their
spending
on
utility
costs.
The
effect
of a
bill
adopted
in a
special
budget
session
Monday
will
force
school
districts
statewide
to
shift
spending
by an
estimated
$10
million
through
budgetreductions
for
an
area
called
"excess
utilities"
that
must
be
returned
to
their
pre-2002
level.
Through
a
special
formula,
school
districts
are
allowed
to
exceed
their
spending
limits
and
raise
property
taxes
to
pay
for
new
utility
costs,
including
electricity,
water,
telephone
and
trash
fees.
Critics
claim
excess
utilities
have
become
a
hidden
budget
override.
Last
year,
the
Legislature
set
new
limits
that
will
remain
in
place
until
a
2009
deadline
that
eliminates
excess
utility
costs
altogether.
But
several
school
districts
used
another
section
of
state
law
to
raise
their
excess
utility
budgets
last
year
before
the
new
limits
went
into
effect,
said
Michael
Hunter,
vice
president
of
the
Arizona
Tax
Research
Association.
In
just
two
years,
the
statewide
total
for
excess
utilities
went
from
$59
million
to an
estimated
$81.5
million.
"With
excess
utilities
going
up
despite
the
Legislature’s
efforts
to
cap
it,
you’re
going
to
see
school
districts
not
just
falling
off
the
cliff
but
taking
a
flying
leap
off
the
cliff,"
Hunter
said
Monday.
Republican
leaders
said
the
plan
adopted
Monday
sends
a
message
to
school
districts.
"This
bill
is an
effort
towards
responsibility
and
accountability,"
said
House
Speaker
Jake
Flake,
R-Snowflake.
East
Valley
school
districts
will
lose
$4.89
million
under
the
plan.
"If
we
can’t
reduce
our
utility
expenses
by
$1.9
million,
we’ll
have
to
cut
$1.9
million
from
somewhere
else
in
our
budget,"
said
Chuck
Essigs,
adviser
to
the
superintendent
in
the
Mesa
Unified
School
District
.
Gov.
Janet
Napolitano
said
she
will
not
block
the
bill’s
enactment
because
districts
already
have
been
on
notice
about
the
issue.