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The Water Cooler
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OKC district hosts first meeting on possible school closures
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<blockquote data-quote="TerryMiller" data-source="post: 3171280" data-attributes="member: 7900"><p>Yes, but as a "possible" example, let's say that the Boise City district has to raise their valuations on land because of so much land set aside as "school land" and not taxable. By having higher land valuations, wouldn't the state then say, "Oh, Boise City doesn't need as much "state" funding because of their higher valuations?" Might that be a reason for their district being one of the low per pupil districts, because they have to compensate for less taxable land?</p><p></p><p><a href="https://okpolicy.org/mapped-oklahoma-school-districts-least-per-pupil-state-aid/" target="_blank">Mapped: The Oklahoma School Districts with the Most and Least Per-Pupil State Aid</a></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TerryMiller, post: 3171280, member: 7900"] Yes, but as a "possible" example, let's say that the Boise City district has to raise their valuations on land because of so much land set aside as "school land" and not taxable. By having higher land valuations, wouldn't the state then say, "Oh, Boise City doesn't need as much "state" funding because of their higher valuations?" Might that be a reason for their district being one of the low per pupil districts, because they have to compensate for less taxable land? [URL='https://okpolicy.org/mapped-oklahoma-school-districts-least-per-pupil-state-aid/']Mapped: The Oklahoma School Districts with the Most and Least Per-Pupil State Aid[/URL] [/QUOTE]
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