The state constitution makes public education the “paramount duty” of Washington’s state government. Levy equalization makes public education fair. It also makes taxation for school funding fair. School districts with abundant commercial and industrial property boast higher taxable wealth, and thus have lower property tax rates. To keep up, other school districts — such as those in Clark County, with more residential property — are forced to impose higher tax rates.
Levy equalization uses a complicated formula to distribute state revenue in ways that more equitably answer the “paramount duty” mandate. Gov. Chris Gregoire proposes to dramatically reduce levy equalization funding as one solution to meet a projected $2 billion shortfall in state revenue. (Legislators will meet in special session after Thanksgiving to address that budget challenge.) Holding levy equalization funding absolutely immune to budget reductions would be unrealistic as the state ventures deeper into this shared-sacrifice journey. But what Gregoire is proposing — basically an overall reduction of 50 percent — would extract a greater sacrifice than is reasonable, particularly from school districts in Clark County.
According to a story last week in The Columbian, although the overall effect would be a halving of levy equalization funding (by about $150 million) for the 2013-2014 school year, the impact would be much greater on some school districts. That’s because of the complicated formula that would be used. In fact, Vancouver, Camas, Washougal and Green Mountain would lose their entire equalization levies. That would mean an $8.4 million impact to the Vancouver district. In the Evergreen, Battle Ground, Hockinson and La Center districts, levy equalization funds would be cut in half by the governor’s proposal.
Consider two points. First, Vancouver Public Schools and seven other districts in Clark County are defined as property-poor in our state. Second, in this proposal by the governor, only the poor districts would sacrifice. Would Washingtonians ever want classrooms to become more crowded only in property-poor school districts? Of course not. Would taxpayers expect graduation standards to be lower — or higher — only in rural school districts? Of course not. That’s why making severe cuts in levy equalization would be unfair not only to students, parents and teachers, but also to taxpayers.