Dade County education tax on ballot

Friday, January 1, 1904

KEY ELECTION DATESFeb. 6: Voter registration endsFeb. 13: In-person early voting beginsMarch 2: Early voting ends, last day to mail out ballotsMarch 5: No votingMarch 6: Election day, polls are open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.Source: Dade County Board of Elections

DADE AUSTERITY CUTSFiscal year - Austerity cut2003 - $237,9222004 - $499,3542005 - $586,2232006 - $586,2182007 - $275,6492008 - $231,9072009 - $812,9882010 - $1.45 million2011 - $1.67 million2012 - $1.76 millionSource: Dade County Schools

The 1 cent education special purpose local option sales tax Dade County voters have approved every election cycle since 1997 will appear again on the March 6 ballot, according to officials.

Dade County Schools Superintendent Shawn Tobin says the tax has paid for repairs, expansions, buses and other improvements since voters first approved it 15 years ago.

Tobin, who's ethically required not to make a pitch for the sales tax for schools, instead points to its role as a revenue source in times when state funding cuts for Dade stand at more than $1.7 million in 2012.

Austerity cuts to the state's Quality Basic Education funding that began in 2003 will amount to more than $1.7 million this school year for Dade, according to Tobin. Dade's cuts have totaled more than $7 million since 2003, which limits the system's ability to hire staff, purchase equipment or make improvements, he said.

There are no plans to borrow money or issue bonds against the next education local option sales tax if it's passed, Tobin said. Dade's current tax, which runs out in April, still is funding ongoing renovations at the county's three school campuses through the summer, he said.

"We're looking at pay-as-you-go," he said of future spending.

"On our [March 6] referendum, we have items such as textbooks, band instruments, renovations for buildings, driver education vehicles, heating and air-conditioning repairs and so forth," Tobin said. But the idea is to save for big projects, then do them, he said.

School board member Carolyn Bradford said the local option tax funding has helped keep teachers by giving the system money for improvements and repairs without dipping heavily into the general fund.

A sales tax also spreads the burden, she said.

"The ESPLOST is not just coming from tshe people in Dade County, it's people who travel through," Bradford said.

Lowanna Vaughan, election supervisor in Dade County, said folks around town aren't talking about the March 6 ballot yet.

"I've not heard any chatter this time, but it's still a ways away," Vaughan said.

Dade's March 6 ballot will be fairly simple, she said.

"You've got the Republican candidates for president, and on the Democrats' side there's just President Obama. And both ballots will have the ESPLOST question," she said.