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The existing construction and modernization program has built more than 100 new schools, replaced fire alarms, air conditioning systems, and roofs at more than 500 schools, upgraded science labs, enabled technology use at schools, and created more than 350,000 jobs. Comprehensive modernization projects are currently underway at 22 schools. However, much more work remains as 70% of school buildings are over a half-century old.
*Los Angeles Unified School District Measure R Pros And Cons
*La Unified School District Rr
*Lausd Measure Rr 2020Los Angeles Unified School District Measure R Pros And Cons
Los Angeles Unified School District Measure RR Support The existing construction and modernization program has built more than 100 new schools, replaced fire alarms, air conditioning systems, and roofs at more than 500 schools, upgraded science labs, enabled technology use at schools, and created more than 350,000 jobs. School bonds in Los Angeles and statewide have not fared well lately, but supporters of Measure RR had reason for optimism — there was no significant opposition campaign and the November electorate was expected to be more tax friendly. A possible parallel would be Measure Q, which the school district put on the ballot in 2008. That earlier $7. Endorsement: Yes on Measure RR to fund L.A. Schools Los Angeles Times Opinion via Yahoo News 3 months ago. As the school-age populations ballooned, students were squeezed into classrooms on year-round schedules that shorted instructional time.Then came the. Twelve years after Measure Q, L.A. Unified is back with a $7-billion bond proposal, Measure RR. But times have changed drastically, and this time the district has done a far more responsible job of.
“The funds from this bond measure would help continue to upgrade facilities without an increase in tax rates,” Superintendent Austin Beutner said. “I hope voters in November will get out and vote on this important measure.”
In addition to bringing aging campuses up to 21st-century learning standards, the bond would allow Los Angeles Unified to improve accessibility and earthquake safety, expand early childhood and adult education programs, add wellness clinics, upgrade school cafeterias, and provide cleaner school buses and renewable energy. Bond proceeds would also help address facilities needs to adapt to a post-COVID-19 learning environment.
There may be a housing shortage in Los Angeles, but another key issue is overcrowding in the public school system. For that particular problem, the Los Angeles Unified School District wants property owners to pay up.
The city’s board of education is pushing for a ballot question that would ask residents to approve raising taxes to fund the school district, according to the L.A. Times. The measure would tax property owners 16 cents per square foot of habitable space in single-family homes, apartments and commercial buildings.
The tax proposal would affect owners of large commercial buildings in particular, putting them on the hook for tens of thousands of dollars a year. Apartment building landlords would likely pass the hike along to tenants, according to the report.
The ballot question — aimed for the June election — would be put to all voters in the L.A. school district and would require two-thirds support. The tax would be in effect for 12 years and estimates are it would raise around $500 million per year, adding a significant portion to the city public school system’s $7.5 billion annual budget.
Mayor Eric Garcetti supports the proposed tax. His office calculates that most homeowners would pay between $100 and $450 extra per year. The higher number is based on taxes for a roughly 2,800-square-foot home.
L.A. homeowners are already some of the highest-taxed in the country. Home values are among the highest in the country and recent tax hikes have made it more expensive to own property in L.A., and the rest of California. Still, many high net-worth Angelenos aren’t decamping to low-tax states like Florida, as they are in New York and other places.
Among other things, the money would go toward reducing class sizes, attracting teachers, and providing more counseling, nursing, and library services to students. Senior citizens and residents receiving disability payments would be exempt from the tax. [LAT] — Dennis Lynch La Unified School District RrLausd Measure Rr 2020
. Los Angeles Unified School District, California, Measure RR, Bond Issue (November 2020): ✔ A “yes” vote supported authorizing the district to issue up to $7 billion in bonds and requiring an estimated property tax levy of $21.74 per $100,000 in assessed value.
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