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Esparto votes by mail on school parcel tax

 

Hudson Sangree, hsangree@sacbee.com
The Sacramento Bee
July 11, 2011 ET

Esparto vot­ers have until Tuesday to decide if the unincorporated area in rural Yolo County should fol­low the lead of afflu­ent communities in the Bay Area and Davis that support their schools with par­cel taxes.

Two-thirds of those voting in the all-mail election must approve Measure B, which calls for a $100 annual par­cel tax on homes and rural prop­er­ties in the Esparto Uni­fied School Dis­trict.

The measure would generate up to $300,000 a year for five years to help make up for big cuts in state ed­ucation funding.

"I'm re­ally do­ing a lot of praying this thing passes. It will be a small mir­acle if it does," said Jane Stallings, a member of the Esparto Board of Ed­ucation and a leading pro­po­nent of the school tax.

If vot­ers approve the measure, it would set a statewide precedent for school dis­tricts like Esparto, where farm­ers, farmworkers and blue-collar la­borers make up much of the popu­lation.

Tra­ditionally only vot­ers in afflu­ent ar­eas such as Berkeley and Marin have approved school par­cel taxes.

In the Sacra­mento region, there's just one community – the well-heeled uni­versity town of Davis – where vot­ers have lev­ied taxes on them­selves to pay for schools.

Since 1983, only about 53 per­cent of proposed par­cel taxes in California have passed, though the rate has increased in re­cent years, ed­ucation experts say.

The Esparto dis­trict, which has three schools and about 1,100 students, has cut nearly $1.7 million from its $11 million bud­get, school of­ficials said.

The dis­trict in re­cent years has laid off 12 per­cent of its teach­ers and aides who help En­glish-language learners.

Summer school and some classes in sci­ence, history and languages were elim­inated. The of­ficials say the dis­trict can no longer afford to bus its sports teams to events.

Yolo County elections chief Freddie Oakley said her office sent out 2,789 ballots to vot­ers in the Esparto school dis­trict, which stretches from the out­skirts of Wood­land to the Capay Valley.

So far, 754 ballots have been mailed, a return rate of about 27 per­cent.

A stand-alone par­cel tax measure in Davis in May generated a 38 per­cent return rate. Vot­ers there narrowly approved a $200 par­cel tax for two years.

The new Davis tax came on top of $320 in par­cel taxes that Davis home­owners were already paying.

Oakley, Yolo County's clerk-recorder, said Friday she expects a slew of last-minute ballots from Esparto.

"They're very community-ori­ented in Esparto, and people talk to their neighbors a lot," Oakley said. "I think the voting is wait­ing on some se­rious week­end coffee klatches."

Esparto school of­ficials held two sparsely at­tended town hall meetings in June to help vot­ers under­stand the ballot measure.

Some prop­erty owners worried their agri­cultur­al parcels would be taxed individually. But connected parcels can be grouped as one for tax purposes, board member Stallings said.

Some ranch­ers who own mul­ti­ple nonadja­cent parcels and would end up paying a $100 tax on each re­main opposed to the measure, she said.

Se­nior cit­i­zens, 65 and over, could apply for a tax exemption.

The grass-roots campaign in Esparto has done with­out pro­fes­sion­al polling or paid campaign consultants, Stallings said.

Pro­po­nents have spent time call­ing their neighbors to encour­age them to vote and answer questions.

The ballot measure is the best hope to fend off fur­ther cuts to classes and programs, she said.

"I just have to think it's go­ing to pass," Stallings said. "We just had to try. It's our last ditch stand." Ballots in the all-mail election must be put in a drop box at the Esparto Regional Library, 17065 Yolo Ave., or brought to the Yolo County Elections Office, 625 Court St., Wood­land, by 8 p.m. Tuesday.

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