Elyria treasurer: state property-tax changes could cut district revenue by about $750,000 a year

Elyria City School District Board of Education · January 9, 2026

Get AI-powered insights, summaries, and transcripts

Subscribe
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Treasurer Colleen told the board that five recently passed state bills revise the tax-growth calculations and are expected to limit local revenue growth, reducing the Elyria City School District's annual revenue by about $750,000; the board will review a five-year forecast at a Feb. 4 presentation.

Treasurer Colleen told the Elyria City School District Board on Jan. 7 that a package of five state bills affecting property-tax calculations has become law and is expected to constrain property-tax revenue growth for the district.

Colleen summarized the measures (referenced by bill numbers to the board) and said the main change revises the 20‑mill floor calculation and brings fixed-sum levies into that floor. She said the district expects the combined effect to reduce revenue by approximately $750,000 per year going forward.

She also reported an accounting issue related to the state's reimbursement for the 'science of reading' teacher training: the state initially reimbursed districts but subsequently reclaimed more than $20,000 from Elyria. Colleen said the district will present a fuller five‑year forecast and further details at a Feb. 4 public presentation.

The board approved routine treasurer action items and forwarded the district's 2025–26 tax budget to the Lorain County Budget Commission before the required filing date.