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District staff explain how to read property tax bills; presenters say vouchers account for roughly 19% of Sparta levy
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Summary
District staff walked through levy components, mill-rate calculation, and a sample tax bill; presenters said about 19% of the district levy goes to voucher schools and reviewed fund categories (10, 27, 39, 80).
At a regular Sparta Area School District meeting, staff presented a high-level walkthrough of how to read a property tax bill and how district levies, equalized value and mill rates interact.
Sam Russell (identified in the meeting as a district staff member) explained the district can under-levy and described the district's levy buckets: fund 10 (general operating), fund 27 (special education), fund 39 (debt service tied to facility financing), and fund 80 (community service and co-curricular). He noted the district receives approximately $11,350 per pupil under current state funding and that the district is near the bottom 1% in revenue per pupil compared with state averages.
Russell said a recent biennium increase (described in the presentation as $325) was passed largely through the levy to local taxpayers, and that voucher payments reduce the share available for district operations. "Almost 20% of our levy goes to vouchers," he said, later clarifying "about 19%" in the presentation.
The presentation used sample tax-bill visuals (some numbers from prior years were used as examples) and provided a simple formula for deriving the mill rate from tax figures; the district also posted a full explanatory document on its website. Board members asked follow-up questions about assessed versus equalized value and suggested the district explore adding a separate line on county tax bills to indicate the portion that funds voucher schools for greater transparency.
The session moved from the tax-bill briefing to other business, including the consent agenda and the subsequent referendum discussion.

