Beaverton, Oregon Parents Saw Effects Of Teacher Layoffs, Ask School Board: 'Please Tax Me'

Parents Ask School Board: 'Please Tax Me'
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Teacher Sarah Morse, center, helps during lunch at the Eastham Community Center Claskamas County Children's Commission Head Start Monday, April 9, 2012, in Oregon City, Ore. Oregon enrolls relatively few children in its state-funded pre-kindergarten program, but spends more money per student than almost every state, according to an annual report released Tuesday by the National Institute for Early Education. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)

Parents in Beaverton, Ore. are asking the school board to tax them more.

One year after Beaverton voters rejected a local option levy that would have raised $14 million for schools, 344 school positions have been axed amid a large budget deficit and class sizes have ballooned.

As a result, some classes number around 50 students, preventing teachers from offering one-on-one assistance. Teachers have been reshuffled to fill vacancies, often teaching subjects they have little or no experience in.

"We're experiencing our own hurricane," parent Beth Estock told The Oregonian.

Students are also concerned that they may not pass the International Baccalaureate exams after losing IB-trained teachers to transfers. Eighth grader Veronika Nagy tells The Oregonian that her math education is so hindered by a large class that her mom hired a math tutor -- a laid off Beaverton teacher.

Seeing the effects of last year's failed levy, parents are proposing another local option levy for the May ballot.

School funding in Oregon is largely determined by the state Legislature, but a local option allows localities to make some funding decisions for their own schools. The levies in Beaverton are based in part on home market values -- the rejected November proposal would have been $1.00 per $1,000 of assessed value per year for five years.

Beaverton is just one of the districts nationwide that have been aversely affected by budget constraints. Since the end of the recession three years ago, 300,000 teachers have lost their jobs, and 292 school districts have cut back on schedules -- reducing to four-day school weeks and dropping full-day kindergarten. The national ratio of students to teachers increased by 4.6 percent between 2008 and 2010.

But communities are seeing the toll on public schools, and many states showed their belief in education during the election. While the sentiment wasn't universal -- Arizona, for example, rejected a $625 million push to give a major boost to K-12 funding through a $0.01 permanent sales tax increase, California voters opted for a sales and income tax increase to save the state's schools from a $4.8 billion cut from school funding.

Before You Go

State Education Funding Ballot Measures 2012
Arizona(01 of07)
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FAILEDBallot measure: Proposition 204Voters rejected a push to give a major boost to K-12 funding through a $0.01 permanent sales tax increase. The move would have added $625 million annually to public schools, but critics said the measure would have hurt the state's businesses. (credit:AP)
California(02 of07)
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PASSEDBallot measure: Proposition 30A huge turnout of youth voters allowed the passage of Prop 30, which will raise income taxes on the wealthiest citizens in California and temporarily increase the state sales tax by a quarter of a cent to fund K-12 schools, community colleges and state universities. The measure is expected to raise more than $6 billion in revenue. (credit:AP)
California (03 of07)
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FAILEDBallot measure: Proposition 38Voters defeated Prop 38 in favor of Prop 30. Prop 38, championed by millionaire civil rights attorney Molly Munger, would have increased state income taxes for all Californians over 12 years. Revenue for the program -- - at an estimated $10 billion annually for the first years of the program -- would have gone directly go to K-12 schools and early education programs. (credit:AP)
Florida(04 of07)
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FAILEDBallot measure: Amendment 3Voters rejected the measure that would set a state revenue limit each year based on a formula that considers population growth and inflation, instead of using the current method of calculating the revenue limit based on personal income. Under current law, Amendment 3 would have required the state, upon exceeding the revenue limit, to deposit the excess revenue into the Budget Stabilization Fund. If the reserve fund were to exceed its cap, the excess money would be deposited into a fund that supports public education, a change from current law. (credit:Getty Images)
Florida(05 of07)
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FAILEDBallot measure: Amendment 8Voters failed to show majority support for Amendment 8, which would have repealed a public funding ban for religious groups, including parochial schools. Statewide teacher's union Florida Education Association opposed the measure, which they say would have opened the door for voucher programs to pull state funding from public schools to private, parochial schools. (credit:AP)
Missouri(06 of07)
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FAILEDBallot measure: Proposition BState voters narrowly rejected a proposed increase in the state's tax on tobacco products. The measure would have increased the per-pack tax on cigarettes by between $0.73 and $1.47, as well as increases on smokeless tobacco products. If passed, it would have generated an estimated $283 million to $423 million annually, half of which would have been directed toward K-12 education. (credit:AP)
Oregon(07 of07)
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PASSEDBallot measure: Measure 85Voters approved of a measure that would redirect corporate "kicker" checks to a special state fund for public schools. Kicker checks are issued when income tax collections exceed state revenue projections by more than 2 percent. Those refunds average about $120 million every two years. (credit:AP)