Editor’s note: The following press released information was released Wednesday by the Whitewater Unified School District to its Facebook page.
On Monday, July 25, the Whitewater Unified School District School Board approved an operational referendum question that will appear on the ballot Tuesday, November 8, 2022.
If approved, the referendum would renew a similar measure voters passed in 2018. That non-recurring operational referendum, which has now expired, has allowed WUSD to exceed its state-imposed revenue limit to fund critical programs and services for students.
With the November referendum, the district and board are not asking the community for additional funding, despite rising costs over the past several years. As a result, taxpayers will likely realize a reduction on their property tax bills.
“The 2018 voter-approved referendum has been critical to ensuring we can continue to provide programs and opportunities that allow our students to thrive and prepare them for the future. Now, we are returning to our community to ask them to renew these important funds,” said Thayer Coburn, Board President. “By placing this measure on the ballot, we are proposing a solution that allows us to maintain the programs and services available to our students now and in the years to come.”
In Wisconsin, the amount of money a school district receives is restricted by a revenue limit. Every district has its own revenue limit, which is impacted by the state budget every two years and is highly dependent on annual enrollment changes. WUSD’s revenue limit dictates the majority of its operational budget.
In recent years, state budgets have not increased revenue limits to keep up with inflation. Expenses for things like state- and federally mandated services, transportation, utilities, and insurance also continue to increase, as do other costs that are out of the district’s control.
If approved by voters, the November referendum would provide WUSD with extended revenue limit authority to maintain academic and athletic opportunities, student support and mental health services, comprehensive instructional and co-curricular programs, and technology and facilities infrastructure.
The funds would simply go toward maintaining these programs and services. The district does not have plans to expand offerings to students.
For more information on the district’s financial needs and the November 8 operational referendum, please visit www.wwusd.org/page/referendum.
Note: The original document from the Whitewater school district as it appeared on its Facebook page and as printed above, is here: https://www.wwusd.org/o/wwusd/article/796575. Fort Atkinson Online did not receive, as it has with some past documents, this document directly from the district’s communication office. Fort Atkinson Online has sent a formal request to the district to gain inclusion on all its media lists and has contacted Whitewater Unified School District Board of Education President Thayer Coburn by phone and email to help facilitate that request.
Update: Fort Atkinson Online has been contacted and added to the district’s media list. Fort Atkinson Online appreciates the prompt attention given to this matter.
Public domain/File photo.
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