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Sidney City board hears financial briefing as property-tax collections top estimates by $684,000

April 16, 2024 | Sidney City, School Districts, Ohio


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Sidney City board hears financial briefing as property-tax collections top estimates by $684,000
The Sidney City Board of Education heard a financial report noting property-tax collections for the fiscal year exceeded the board’s estimate by $684,000, about 4.36%, and then approved the minutes, financial reports and invoices as presented.

In a presentation brought to the table by the chair, the board’s year-to-date revenue picture through March was described as “performing very well,” with the chair saying property-tax receipts “exceeded our estimated property tax collections by $684,000, 4.36%.” The presenter told trustees that state allocations were essentially on target and that the primary area of variance on the expenditure side was purchase services, especially higher-than-expected specialized services and excess-cost placements.

The presenter said those specialized services—some new or expanded since the July estimate and associated with placements and alternative-school services—accounted for the largest part of the purchase-services variance. He estimated the net variance attributable to those changes at roughly $250,000 relative to the department’s purchase-services budget, and said some costs remain seasonal with an expectation they will slow in April and May.

Trustees asked whether the percentage gap would grow before year end. The presenter said costs are likely to increase somewhat through the rest of the fiscal year as remaining invoices arrive, but that the district’s overall year-to-date expenditures remained within about 1% of projections once other line items were considered.

The board moved to approve the minutes, financial reports and invoices after the briefing; the motion carried.

Looking ahead, the presenter said the district will refine its five-year rolling forecast as more year-end data is finalized in May, when internal estimates tend to be most accurate for the fiscal year.

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