Budget 2023
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Proposal supports student success without raising taxes
The City School District of 91¸£Àûµ¼º½’s 2023-24 budget proposal would not raise taxes and would continue to support all current programs and services, including those added during the pandemic, following the state’s fulfillment of its promise to fully fund all schools statewide.
The $307.3 million budget proposal that voters will consider May 16 includes $16.4 million in additional state aid. This is the final year of the state’s three-year plan to phase in full Foundation Aid – the main revenue schools use to support programs and services for students – for every school district statewide.
The district’s budget proposal has no tax-levy increase for the third time in the last eight years.
The district’s average tax-levy increase over the past decade is less than 1% – 0.9% – as the Board of Education and district balance multi-year fiscal planning to meet student needs while minimizing the impact on taxpayers.
“We are grateful to Governor Hochul and our state legislative leaders for following through on their promise to fully fund Foundation Aid for all New York school districts by the 2023-24 school year,” said Board President Vickie Smith.
“We cannot achieve equity for all students without the state’s full commitment to providing all school districts with their fair share of funding. This is an important and historic step for New York and for our school district, and it will allow us to maintain the staffing and resources our students need as we continue to rebuild from the COVID-19 pandemic.”
An equity promise fulfilled
In the 2021-22 school year, the district received only 78% of the Foundation Aid it was owed according to the state’s school funding formula. Now funded at 100% for the first time in 2023-24, that represents a total gap of more than $40 million in annual funding that the state has closed for 91¸£Àûµ¼º½’s public schools over the past three years.
With those increases, the 2023-24 budget proposal also marks the first time that state aid has accounted for more than half of the district’s revenue (52%, compared to 42% in the 2016-17 school year).
The local taxpayers’ share has decreased during that time from 49% to 40%.
In addition to the budget proposal on May 16, voters also will be asked to consider Proposition #2. This proposal would allow the district to invest $9 million from its Capital Reserve Fund to offset inflationary cost increases in the Rebuilding 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ High School construction project, which have escalated above those in the project’s original budget (see "Prop 2" story below).
Two board seats also are up for election May 16. The terms of Vice President Anne Savage and member Damarise Mann expire at the end of June. Both are seeking re-election, and at press time no other candidates had indicated an intent to run (see "Two board seats open" story below for more details).
Avoiding the ‘fiscal cliff’
The timing of the state’s commitment to fully funding Foundation Aid is ideal as school districts enter the final year with one-time federal COVID-19 relief funds available.
Without the state’s commitment to fiscal equity in public education, many districts, including 91¸£Àûµ¼º½, could have been facing a fiscal cliff a year from now.
The Foundation Aid increase for 2023-24 will allow the district’s budget to cover all 73 positions currently in one-time federal American Rescue Plan funding. This maintains investments in staffing the district made during the pandemic to increase support for students’ academic, social-emotional and mental health needs.
The budget proposal also would support 21.1 new positions (see "Budget at a Glance" story below for more details). That includes 7.5 new teachers at North 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ Middle School to accommodate the second year of the three-year phase-in of the middle school enrollment pattern approved in 2022.
The proposal also would invest in a second new play area at Edmund J. O’Neal School of Excellence, 50 Lark St., for students at 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ International Center and the Dual Language Program. This would accompany the playground being built this year.
Voters approved the purchase of this second parcel, on Second Street behind the building, last year.
The district anticipates an increase of about $2.1 million in payments to charter schools in 2023-24, with a projected increase from $38.3 million in the current school year to $40.4 million.
The district also is supporting the budget proposal with about $4.1 million from reserves.
“New York’s commitment to equitable funding for all school districts is the right investment in our children’s future at the right time for our state,” said Interim Superintendent John Yagielski.
“This funding has allowed us to develop a budget proposal that would maintain the programs and services that are helping our students and families recover from the challenges we all have experienced over the last three years as a result of the pandemic.”
Prop 2: No tax impact in facilities proposal
In addition to the 2023-24 budget proposal, voters also will have the opportunity May 16 to consider a proposition that would allow the district to use $9 million from the Capital Reserve Fund to offset inflationary cost increases on the Rebuilding 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ High School construction project.
Proposition #2 would have no additional impact on taxes.
The additional $9 million from the Capital Reserve is needed to complete the 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ High project due to significant increases in the cost of building materials, especially over the past year.
Cost escalations totaled 10% in the eight years prior to the successful $179.9 million 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ High referendum in 2016, and inflation at this rate was built into the project’s budget. Escalation in the last year alone has been 8.3%, with a total escalation of 33% since 2016.
These are the same economic pressures that have affected the cost of consumer items such as eggs, butter and fuel. As an example, in 2020 a dozen eggs cost about $2.77 – today it costs about $4.21.
That’s an increase of more than 50% during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The high rate of inflation has increased the total cost of the 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ High project by nearly $10.5 million.
The scope of the project also has increased by about $767,000 to add work such as regrading the grass soccer and football fields behind school, reseeding the old tennis courts along Partridge Street and building an outside storage building for maintenance equipment.
The district has reduced those costs by redesigning some aspects of the project and accessing funds from other sources, including the Smart Schools Bond Act. But a gap remains to be able to complete the fourth and final phase. The project is scheduled to be finished in 2025.
Voters approved creation of a Capital Reserve Fund in 2013 to allow the district to set aside money to help offset the tax impact of construction projects and building maintenance. In 2016, voters approved the district’s proposal to raise the cap for the fund to $18 million.
Voter approval is required before the district can use any funds from the Capital Reserve. No additional taxes would be necessary to use $9 million from this fund on the high school project.
Estimated revenue
¸é±ð±¹±ð²Ô³Ü±ð&²Ô²ú²õ±è;â–¼ | 2022-23 | 2023-24 | $ Change |
---|---|---|---|
State | $143,880,616 | $160,254,456 | $16,373,840 |
Property tax | $122,351,302 | $122,351,302 | $0 |
Local - Other than property tax | $17,110,443 | $17,510,443 | $400,000 |
Other | $3,765,000 | $4,052,257 | $287,257 |
Federal | $1,050,000 | $3,100,000 | $2,050,000 |
TOTAL REVENUE | $288,157,361 | $307,268,458 | $19,111,097 |
Proposed expenditures
·¡³æ±è±ð²Ô»å¾±³Ù³Ü°ù±ð²õ&²Ô²ú²õ±è;â–¼ | 2022-23 (Adopted) | 2023-24 (Proposed) | $ Change |
---|---|---|---|
Program including transportation | $190,494,954 | $204,111,259 | $13,616,305 |
Charter school tuition | $38,324,815 | $40,425,000 | $2,100,185 |
Administrative/general support | $22,106,983 | $23,428,063 | $1,321,080 |
Capital/debt service | $19,004,073 | $19,811,746 | $807,673 |
Maintenance & operations | $18,226,536 | $19,492,390 | $1,265,854 |
TOTAL EXPENDITURES | $288,157,361 | $307,268,458 | $19,111,097 |
Looking for a detailed breakdown of the proposal? You can download the complete 2023-24 budget statement.
2023-24 budget at a glance
Total – $307.3 million
Tax-levy increase – Zero
- Third time in the last eight years there has been no tax-levy increase proposed
- Average increase in last 10 years would be less than 1%
What the budget supports
- Advanced Placement, International Baccalaureate and University in the High School courses at 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ High
- Career and technical education pathways at 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ High
- Social-emotional supports at all grade levels
- Athletic teams and intramurals for students in grades 7-12
- AVID college- and career-readiness programs starting in middle school
- Three themed magnet elementary schools
- Expanded bilingual Dual Language Program
- Band, chorus and orchestra starting in third grade
- 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ Marching Falcons band and color guard (including winter guard and indoor percussion ensembles)
- Full-day prekindergarten at 12 elementary schools and 10 community locations
- Community Schools initiatives at eight schools: Arbor Hill, Giffen, Myers, North 91¸£Àûµ¼º½, Schuyler, Sheridan Prep, TOAST and Tony Clement
- 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ International Center (K-12)
- Tony Clement Center for Education (grades 7-12)
What’s new in the budget
- Funding for 73 total positions district-wide supported during the pandemic through the district’s one-time federal COVID-19 relief funds
- 21.1 new positions:
- 7.5 new seventh-grade teaching positions at North 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ Middle School to support phase-in of our middle school feeder pattern
- 3 teaching positions at 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ High: Cosmetology, Health Science and Social Studies
- 3 district-wide computer technicians
- 1 data engineer
- 1 technical support leader
- 1 assistant director of prekindergarten
- 1 assistant director of transportation
- 1 Dual Language Program second-grade teacher to continue the commitment to double the program’s size
- 1 special education kindergarten teacher
- 1 secondary special education instructional coach
- 1 part-time elementary theater teacher (0.6 FTE)
- A second play area for students at 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ International Center and the Dual Language Program, located at Edmund J. O’Neal School of Excellence at 50 Lark St.
Federal COVID-19 relief funds
- New Chromebooks for students and employees
- Upgraded transportation routing software
- Hiring and recruiting initiatives to address staff shortages
- Elementary reading, phonics and math programs and supplies to support student growth
- After-school and extended-day opportunities, including programs with community partners
- Curriculum writing and development
- Enhancing summer school
How your tax bill is set
Your school tax bill is determined by four factors, three of which are outside the district’s control.
- School tax levy: The total amount of money a school district needs to collect from property owners each year – $122.4 million in the 2023-24 proposed budget. There is no tax-levy increase proposed for 2023-24. This is the only factor the school district controls.
- The state School Tax Relief Program (STAR): Partial school tax exemptions for owner-occupied homes (see the chart below).
- Your property assessment and your exemptions: The assessment is an estimate of the value of how much a property would sell for under normal conditions and is set by the City of 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ during the summer each year. Certain exemptions are available. For example, by law, not-for-profit entities are generally exempt from property taxes.
- The homestead vs. non-homestead “Adjusted Base Proportions:” These proportions were set by the City of 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ in December, and they are used in combination with the total homestead and non-homestead assessed values to determine the final tax rates for each category.
Once all factors are set, the final tax rate determines how much of the levy each property owner pays.
Residential taxpayers may also be eligible for the NYS 91¸£Àûµ¼º½owner Tax Rebate Credit, a percentage of the existing STAR benefit. Basic STAR recipients with incomes below $250,000 and Enhanced STAR recipients are eligible.
How the proposed budget will affect your taxes
The City School District of 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ is proposing no increase in its tax levy for 2023-24. However, your overall tax bill may change by a different percentage:
- If the value of your property changed, or your exemptions changed;
- If your STAR reimbursement changed; or
- If the change in the total assessed value for your property’s category (homestead or non-homestead) is different than the change in the “Adjusted Base Proportions” for each category that the City of 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ set in December.
School Tax Relief Program (STAR) | |||
---|---|---|---|
School tax | 2022-23 | 2023-24 | Estimated change* |
Without STAR exemption | $3,323 | $3,323 | $0 |
With Basic STAR | $2,728 | $2,728 | $0 |
With Enhanced STAR for seniors | $1,953 | $1,953 | $0 |
*Estimated school tax bill for a typical taxpayer whose home is valued at $150,000. The final tax rate will be set in late summer after the City of 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ finalizes its tax assessments and those assessments are reviewed by the New York State Office of Real Property Tax Services. |
By the numbers
0
Tax-levy increase in the 2023-24 budget proposal
0.898
Percent of the district’s average tax-levy increase over the past 10 years
4
Sports in which 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ High student-athletes qualified for states during the fall and winter seasons
9
Career and Technical Education (CTE) pathways at 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ High that lead to professional certification
24
91¸£Àûµ¼º½ High virtuosos selected for last fall’s NYSSMA Area All-State Music Festival
45
Languages spoken by district families. Top five: English, Spanish, Arabic, Pashto and Karen
54
Fine Arts classes offered at 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ High (35 visual and performing arts, 19 music)
63
Sports teams available to students in grades 7-12
68
CTE students at 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ High inducted into the National Technical Honor Society on April 28
82
The four-year graduation percentage rate for 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ High’s Class of 2022
120
91¸£Àûµ¼º½ High seniors inducted into the National Honor Society this year
300
Bags of food sent home weekly last summer by the 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ Fund for Education’s backpack food program
340
Artworks by district students displayed at the Empire State Plaza Student Art Exhibit in March
468
People following the district’s new Instagram account this school year @albany.schools
1,805
Students from grades 3-12 playing an instrument in band or orchestra this school year
5,956
Cheesy bread sticks served in district elementary schools every other Friday
12,054
People following us on Facebook @albanyschools
27,126
Devices managed by our IT staff (372 more than last year!)
2,325,268
Email updates sent to families via SchoolMessenger from September-March
475-6065
Number to call to schedule a budget presentation for your organization (don't forget the 518!)
Voting locations
The City School District of 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ will hold in-person voting at 15 locations city-wide May 16. Polls will be open from 7 a.m.-9 p.m. Not sure of your voting location? Visit albanyschools.org/vote for a searchable directory.
Ward | Districts | Voting Location |
---|---|---|
1st | All |
New Hope Church |
2nd | All | Giffen Memorial Elementary School 274 South Pearl St. |
3rd | All | Sheridan Preparatory Academy 400 Sheridan Ave. |
4th | All | North 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ Middle School 570 North Pearl St. |
5th | All | Arbor Hill/West Hill Library 148 Henry Johnson Blvd. |
6th | All | William S. Hackett Middle School 45 Delaware Ave. |
7th | 1-5 | Delaware Community School 43 Bertha St. |
7th | 6-8 | William S. Hackett Middle School 45 Delaware Ave. |
8th | 1-4 | NEW LOCATION Stephen and Harriet Myers Middle School 100 Elbel Court |
8th | 5-9 | 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ School of Humanities (ASH) 108 Whitehall Road |
9th | All | New Scotland Elementary School 369 New Scotland Ave. |
10th | All | Pine Hills Elementary School 41 North Allen St. |
11th | All | 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ High School's Abrookin Career and Technical Center 99 Kent St. |
12th | 1-3 | Italian American Community Center 257 Washington Ave. Extension |
12th | 4-9 | Montessori Magnet School 45 Tremont St. |
13th | All | Pine Hills Elementary School 41 North Allen St. |
14th | All | NEW LOCATION Stephen and Harriet Myers Middle School 100 Elbel Court |
15th | All | Eagle Point Elementary School 1044 Western Ave. |
Absentee voting
The City School District of 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ automatically sends absentee ballots to people the 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ County Board of Elections designates as having a permanent disability.
Those who want to vote with an absentee ballot because of illness, hospitalization, vacation, studies, business or incarceration must apply for the absentee ballot.
Please note that the state will no longer allow concern about potential exposure to COVID-19 as an option for absentee voting, as it has the last three years.
You can call (518) 475-6015 and ask to have an absentee application mailed to you, or you can download one at albanyschools.org/vote.
If you want an absentee ballot mailed to your home, the district clerk must receive your completed application at least seven days before the vote – by Tuesday, May 9 at 4 p.m.
If you want to pick up your absentee ballot in-person at the district headquarters in Academy Park, you must have your completed application to the clerk by 4 p.m. the day before the budget vote – Monday, May 15.
All absentee ballots must be returned to the clerk by 5 p.m. on the day of the vote – Tuesday, May 16.
Two board seats open
Two seats on the City School District of 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ Board of Education will be up for election May 16.
Vice President Anne Savage and board member Damarise Mann both are seeking re-election to four-year terms.
Savage was first elected in 2014 and, if re-elected May 16, will serve her third term.
Mann was elected in 2018 to fill a vacancy and re-elected in 2019 to a full four-year term. She would begin her second full term July 1 if re-elected.
The deadline to submit petitions was April 26.
At press time, no other candidates had submitted the required petitions to run.
Visit albanyschools.org/boe for more information.
What if the budget is not approved?
If voters do not approve the budget May 16, state law gives the Board of Education three options:
- Put up the same proposal for another vote;
- Present a revised budget proposal for voter consideration; or
- Adopt a contingency budget.
If the board opted for a second vote and it also failed, state law would require the district to adopt a contingency budget.
For 2023-24, a contingency budget would be $305,932,378 and would hold the tax levy to its current level as required by state law.
In addition, a contingency budget requires cuts to specific areas: the district would need to eliminate $1,336,080 from the proposed budget to meet those requirements.
The state closely regulates any district operating under a contingency budget. Community groups are required to pay to use school buildings when a district is operating under a contingency budget. The state also prohibits spending on student supplies, equipment and certain raises, to name a few additional items.
This would mean that, in addition to the prohibited spending noted above, the district would have to consider cuts to staffing and programs to meet the new contingency requirements.
Library vote information
In addition to school-related items on this year’s ballot, residents will be asked to vote on the 91¸£Àûµ¼º½ Public Library’s 2023-24 budget proposal.
The library’s proposed budget for 2023-24 is $7,710,529. The library’s Board of Trustees unanimously approved the proposal on March 14. The total tax levy includes a 4.58% increase, which is below the library’s tax cap.
The proposed increase would mean that the owner of a $150,000 home would pay approximately $11.16 more in library taxes next year.
There are no library Board of Trustees positions up for election this year.
For more information, visit or contact Stephanie Simon at (518) 708-3912.
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