Bill Text: NY A41005 | 2009-2010 | General Assembly | Introduced


Bill Title: Relates to establishing limitations upon school district and local government tax levies.

Spectrum: Committee Bill

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2010-07-30 - referred to ways and means [A41005 Detail]

Download: New_York-2009-A41005-Introduced.html
                           S T A T E   O F   N E W   Y O R K
       ________________________________________________________________________
           S. 5                                                        A. 5
                             Second Extraordinary Session
                             S E N A T E - A S S E M B L Y
                                     July 30, 2010
                                      ___________
       IN  SENATE  --  Introduced  by  COMMITTEE ON RULES -- (at request of the
         Governor) -- read twice and ordered printed, and when  printed  to  be
         committed to the Committee on Rules
       IN  ASSEMBLY  --  Introduced by COMMITTEE ON RULES -- (at request of the
         Governor) -- read once and referred to the Committee on Ways and Means
       AN ACT to amend the real property tax law, the  education  law  and  the
         general  municipal  law,  in relation to establishing limitations upon
         school district and local government tax levies; and repealing certain
         provisions of the education law relating thereto
         THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK, REPRESENTED IN SENATE AND  ASSEM-
       BLY, DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:
    1    Section  1.  The  real  property  tax  law  is amended by adding a new
    2  section 1307 to read as follows:
    3    S 1307. LIMITATIONS UPON SCHOOL DISTRICT  TAX  LEVIES.  1.  GENERALLY.
    4  UNLESS OTHERWISE PROVIDED BY LAW, THE AMOUNT OF TAXES THAT MAY BE LEVIED
    5  BY  OR  ON  BEHALF  OF  ANY  SCHOOL  DISTRICT,  OTHER THAN A CITY SCHOOL
    6  DISTRICT OF A CITY WITH ONE HUNDRED TWENTY-FIVE THOUSAND INHABITANTS  OR
    7  MORE,  SHALL NOT EXCEED THE TAX LEVY LIMITATIONS ESTABLISHED PURSUANT TO
    8  SECTION TWO THOUSAND TWENTY-THREE-A OF THE EDUCATION LAW.  IT  SHALL  BE
    9  THE  RESPONSIBILITY  OF THE COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION TO ANNUALLY DETER-
   10  MINE THE TAX LEVY LIMIT OF EACH SCHOOL DISTRICT IN ACCORDANCE  WITH  THE
   11  PROVISIONS OF THIS SECTION.
   12    2. DEFINITIONS. AS USED IN THIS SECTION:
   13    (A)  "ALLOWABLE  LEVY  GROWTH FACTOR" SHALL BE THE LESSER OF:  (I) ONE
   14  AND FOUR ONE HUNDREDTHS; OR (II) THE SUM OF ONE PLUS ONE HUNDRED  TWENTY
   15  PERCENT  OF  THE  INFLATION  FACTOR;  PROVIDED, HOWEVER, THAT IN NO CASE
   16  SHALL THE LEVY GROWTH FACTOR BE LESS THAN ONE.
   17    (B) "AVAILABLE CARRYOVER" MEANS THE SUM OF THE AMOUNTS  BY  WHICH  THE
   18  TAX LEVY FOR EACH SCHOOL YEAR FROM THE TWO THOUSAND ELEVEN--TWO THOUSAND
        EXPLANATION--Matter in ITALICS (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                             [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                  LBD12309-01-0
       S. 5                                2                               A. 5
    1  TWELVE  SCHOOL YEAR THROUGH THE PRIOR SCHOOL YEAR WAS BELOW THE APPLICA-
    2  BLE TAX LEVY LIMIT FOR SUCH SCHOOL YEAR, IF ANY.
    3    (C) "CAPITAL LOCAL EXPENDITURES" MEANS THE TAXES ASSOCIATED WITH BUDG-
    4  ETED  EXPENDITURES  RESULTING FROM THE CONSTRUCTION, ACQUISITION, RECON-
    5  STRUCTION, REHABILITATION OR IMPROVEMENT OF SCHOOL BUILDINGS,  INCLUDING
    6  DEBT  SERVICE  AND  LEASE  EXPENDITURES,  SUBJECT TO THE APPROVAL OF THE
    7  QUALIFIED VOTERS WHERE REQUIRED BY LAW.
    8    (D) "CAPITAL TAX LEVY" MEANS THE TAX LEVY NECESSARY TO SUPPORT CAPITAL
    9  LOCAL EXPENDITURES, IF ANY.
   10    (E) "COMING SCHOOL YEAR" MEANS THE SCHOOL  YEAR  FOR  WHICH  TAX  LEVY
   11  LIMITS ARE BEING DETERMINED PURSUANT TO THIS SECTION.
   12    (F)  "INFLATION  FACTOR" MEANS THE QUOTIENT OF: (I) THE AVERAGE OF THE
   13  NATIONAL CONSUMER PRICE INDEXES DETERMINED BY THE UNITED STATES  DEPART-
   14  MENT OF LABOR FOR THE TWELVE MONTH PERIOD PRECEDING JANUARY FIRST OF THE
   15  CURRENT  YEAR  MINUS  THE AVERAGE OF THE NATIONAL CONSUMER PRICE INDEXES
   16  DETERMINED BY THE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF LABOR FOR THE TWELVE-MONTH
   17  PERIOD PRECEDING JANUARY FIRST OF THE PRIOR YEAR, DIVIDED BY:  (II)  THE
   18  AVERAGE  OF THE NATIONAL CONSUMER PRICE INDEXES DETERMINED BY THE UNITED
   19  STATES DEPARTMENT OF LABOR FOR THE TWELVE-MONTH PERIOD PRECEDING JANUARY
   20  FIRST OF THE PRIOR YEAR, WITH THE RESULT EXPRESSED AS A DECIMAL TO  FOUR
   21  PLACES.
   22    (G)  "PRIOR  SCHOOL  YEAR" MEANS THE SCHOOL YEAR IMMEDIATELY PRECEDING
   23  THE COMING SCHOOL YEAR.
   24    (H) "SCHOOL DISTRICT" MEANS  A  COMMON  SCHOOL  DISTRICT,  UNION  FREE
   25  SCHOOL  DISTRICT,  CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT, CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL DISTRICT
   26  OR A CITY  SCHOOL  DISTRICT  IN  A  CITY  WITH  LESS  THAN  ONE  HUNDRED
   27  TWENTY-FIVE THOUSAND INHABITANTS.
   28    (I)  "TAX LEVY BASE" MEANS THE AMOUNT OF TAXES A SCHOOL DISTRICT WOULD
   29  BE AUTHORIZED TO LEVY WITHOUT THE ADDITION OF  ANY  AVAILABLE  CARRYOVER
   30  AMOUNT.
   31    (J)  "TAX  LEVY  LIMIT" MEANS THE AMOUNT OF TAXES A SCHOOL DISTRICT IS
   32  AUTHORIZED TO LEVY PURSUANT TO THIS SECTION, PROVIDED, HOWEVER, THAT THE
   33  TAX LEVY LIMIT SHALL NOT INCLUDE THE DISTRICT'S  CAPITAL  TAX  LEVY,  IF
   34  ANY.
   35    3.  TAX  BASE  GROWTH  FACTOR. (A) NO LATER THAN FEBRUARY FIFTEENTH OF
   36  EACH YEAR, THE STATE BOARD SHALL IDENTIFY  THOSE  SCHOOL  DISTRICTS  FOR
   37  WHICH  TAX  BASE GROWTH FACTORS MUST BE DETERMINED FOR THE COMING SCHOOL
   38  YEAR, AND SHALL NOTIFY THE COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION  OF  THE  TAX  BASE
   39  GROWTH FACTORS SO DETERMINED, IF ANY.
   40    (B)  THE STATE BOARD SHALL CALCULATE A QUANTITY CHANGE FACTOR FOR EACH
   41  SCHOOL DISTRICT FOR THE COMING SCHOOL YEAR BASED UPON  THE  PHYSICAL  OR
   42  QUANTITY  CHANGE,  AS  DEFINED  BY SECTION TWELVE HUNDRED TWENTY OF THIS
   43  CHAPTER, REPORTED TO THE STATE BOARD BY THE ASSESSOR OR ASSESSORS PURSU-
   44  ANT TO SECTION FIVE HUNDRED SEVENTY-FIVE OF THIS CHAPTER.  THE  QUANTITY
   45  CHANGE  FACTOR  SHALL SHOW THE PERCENTAGE BY WHICH THE FULL VALUE OF THE
   46  TAXABLE REAL PROPERTY IN THE SCHOOL DISTRICT HAS CHANGED DUE TO PHYSICAL
   47  OR QUANTITY CHANGE BETWEEN THE SECOND FINAL  ASSESSMENT  ROLL  OR  ROLLS
   48  PRECEDING  THE FINAL ASSESSMENT ROLL OR ROLLS UPON WHICH TAXES ARE TO BE
   49  LEVIED, AND THE FINAL ASSESSMENT ROLL OR ROLLS IMMEDIATELY PRECEDING THE
   50  FINAL ASSESSMENT ROLL OR ROLLS UPON WHICH TAXES ARE TO BE LEVIED.
   51    (C)  AFTER  DETERMINING  THE  QUANTITY  CHANGE  FACTOR  FOR  A  SCHOOL
   52  DISTRICT, THE STATE BOARD SHALL PROCEED AS FOLLOWS:
   53    (I)  IF  THE QUANTITY CHANGE FACTOR IS NEGATIVE, THE STATE BOARD SHALL
   54  NOT DETERMINE A TAX BASE GROWTH FACTOR FOR THE SCHOOL DISTRICT.
   55    (II) IF THE QUANTITY CHANGE FACTOR IS POSITIVE, THE STATE BOARD  SHALL
   56  DETERMINE  A  TAX  BASE  GROWTH  FACTOR FOR THE SCHOOL DISTRICT WHICH IS
       S. 5                                3                               A. 5
    1  EQUAL TO ONE PLUS THE QUANTITY CHANGE FACTOR, PROVIDED THAT IN  NO  CASE
    2  SHALL A TAX BASE GROWTH FACTOR BE IN EXCESS OF ONE AND ONE-TENTH.
    3    4.  COMPUTATION  OF  TAX  LEVY  LIMITS. (A) THE TAX LEVY BASE FOR EACH
    4  SCHOOL YEAR SHALL BE DETERMINED AS FOLLOWS:
    5    (I) ASCERTAIN THE TOTAL AMOUNT OF TAXES LEVIED FOR  THE  PRIOR  SCHOOL
    6  YEAR.
    7    (II)  ADD  ANY  PAYMENTS  IN LIEU OF TAXES THAT WERE RECEIVABLE IN THE
    8  PRIOR SCHOOL YEAR.
    9    (III) SUBTRACT THE CAPITAL TAX LEVY FOR THE PRIOR SCHOOL YEAR, IF ANY.
   10    (IV) MULTIPLY THE RESULT BY THE ALLOWABLE LEVY GROWTH FACTOR.
   11    (V) MULTIPLY THE RESULT BY THE TAX BASE GROWTH FACTOR, IF ANY.
   12    (B) THE TAX LEVY BASE SHALL BE ADJUSTED BY ADDING THE AVAILABLE CARRY-
   13  OVER, IF ANY, PROVIDED THAT IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AMOUNT OF ADDED CARRY-
   14  OVER EXCEED ONE AND ONE-HALF PERCENT OF  THE  TAX  LEVY  FOR  THE  PRIOR
   15  SCHOOL YEAR.
   16    (C)  THE  TAX  LEVY  LIMIT  FOR  THE  COMING  SCHOOL YEAR SHALL BE THE
   17  ADJUSTED TAX LEVY BASE, LESS ANY PAYMENTS IN LIEU OF TAXES RECEIVABLE IN
   18  THE COMING SCHOOL YEAR. NO LATER THAN MARCH  FIRST  OF  EACH  YEAR,  THE
   19  COMMISSIONER  OF  EDUCATION  SHALL CALCULATE THE TAX LEVY LIMIT FOR EACH
   20  SCHOOL DISTRICT FOR THE COMING SCHOOL YEAR, AND SHALL NOTIFY EACH SCHOOL
   21  DISTRICT OF THE ALLOWABLE LEVY GROWTH FACTOR, THE  DISTRICT'S  TAX  BASE
   22  GROWTH  FACTOR,  IF ANY, THE DISTRICT'S TAX LEVY BASE AND THE DISTRICT'S
   23  TAX LEVY LIMIT.
   24    5. VOTER UNDERRIDES. THE QUALIFIED VOTERS OF  A  SCHOOL  DISTRICT  MAY
   25  VOTE  TO  REDUCE  (OR UNDERRIDE) THE LIMITATIONS IMPOSED BY THIS SECTION
   26  FOR SUCH SCHOOL DISTRICT FOR  THE  COMING  SCHOOL  YEAR  IN  THE  MANNER
   27  PROVIDED BY SECTION TWO THOUSAND TWENTY-THREE-A OF THE EDUCATION LAW.
   28    6.  REORGANIZED  SCHOOL  DISTRICTS.  WHEN TWO OR MORE SCHOOL DISTRICTS
   29  REORGANIZE, THE COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION SHALL DETERMINE THE  TAX  LEVY
   30  LIMIT  FOR  THE  REORGANIZED SCHOOL DISTRICT BASED ON THE RESPECTIVE TAX
   31  LEVY LIMITS OF THE SCHOOL DISTRICTS THAT FORMED THE REORGANIZED DISTRICT
   32  FROM THE LAST  SCHOOL  YEAR  IN  WHICH  THEY  WERE  SEPARATE  DISTRICTS,
   33  PROVIDED  THAT  IN  THE  EVENT OF FORMATION OF A NEW CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL
   34  DISTRICT, THE TAX LEVY LIMITS FOR THE NEW CENTRAL HIGH  SCHOOL  DISTRICT
   35  AND  ITS  COMPONENT  SCHOOL  DISTRICTS SHALL BE DETERMINED IN ACCORDANCE
   36  WITH A METHODOLOGY PRESCRIBED BY THE COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION.
   37    7. ERRONEOUS LEVIES. IN THE EVENT A SCHOOL DISTRICT'S ACTUAL TAX  LEVY
   38  FOR  A  GIVEN  SCHOOL  YEAR EXCEEDS THE MAXIMUM ALLOWABLE LEVY AS ESTAB-
   39  LISHED PURSUANT TO SECTION TWO THOUSAND TWENTY-THREE-A OF THE  EDUCATION
   40  LAW DUE TO CLERICAL OR TECHNICAL ERRORS, THE SCHOOL DISTRICT SHALL PLACE
   41  THE  EXCESS  AMOUNT  OF  THE  LEVY  IN  RESERVE  IN ACCORDANCE WITH SUCH
   42  REQUIREMENTS AS THE STATE COMPTROLLER MAY PRESCRIBE, AND SHALL USE  SUCH
   43  FUNDS  AND  ANY  INTEREST  EARNED THEREON TO OFFSET THE TAX LEVY FOR THE
   44  ENSUING SCHOOL YEAR.
   45    S 2. The education law is amended by adding a new  section  2023-a  to
   46  read as follows:
   47    S  2023-A. VOTER APPROVAL OF TAX LEVY LIMITATIONS. 1. THE TAX LEVY FOR
   48  ANY SCHOOL DISTRICT SUBJECT TO THE TAX LEVY LIMITATIONS  ESTABLISHED  BY
   49  SECTION  THIRTEEN  HUNDRED  SEVEN  OF THE REAL PROPERTY TAX LAW SHALL BE
   50  APPROVED BY THE QUALIFIED VOTERS OF THE SCHOOL DISTRICT AS  PROVIDED  IN
   51  THIS  SECTION.  AS USED IN THIS SECTION, THE TERM "TAX LEVY PROPOSITION"
   52  MEANS A PROPOSITION TO AUTHORIZE A TAX LEVY SUFFICIENT  TO  SUPPORT  THE
   53  PROPOSED  SCHOOL  DISTRICT  BUDGET,  EXCLUDING  ANY PROPOSED CAPITAL TAX
   54  LEVY; THE TERM "UNDERRIDE PROPOSITION" MEANS A PROPOSITION TO  IMPOSE  A
   55  MORE RESTRICTIVE TAX LEVY LIMIT UPON A SCHOOL DISTRICT THAN THE TAX LEVY
   56  LIMIT ESTABLISHED PURSUANT TO SECTION THIRTEEN HUNDRED SEVEN OF THE REAL
       S. 5                                4                               A. 5
    1  PROPERTY  TAX  LAW;  AND  THE TERM "GENERAL PURPOSE STATE AID" MEANS ALL
    2  FORMS OF STATE AID WHICH ARE PAYABLE TO A  SCHOOL  DISTRICT  AS  GENERAL
    3  SUPPORT  FOR  THE  PUBLIC  SCHOOLS,  WITH THE EXCEPTION OF BUILDING AID,
    4  LIBRARY  AID,  COMPUTER HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE AID, UNIVERSAL PRE-KINDER-
    5  GARTEN AID, TEXTBOOK AID, PUBLIC HIGH COST EXCESS COST AID  AND  PRIVATE
    6  EXCESS  COST  AID. THE DIRECTOR OF THE BUDGET SHALL ANNUALLY CERTIFY THE
    7  AMOUNT OF GENERAL PURPOSE STATE AID PAYABLE TO EACH SCHOOL DISTRICT.
    8    2. A. THE QUALIFIED VOTERS OF A COMMON  SCHOOL  DISTRICT,  UNION  FREE
    9  SCHOOL  DISTRICT,  CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT, CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL DISTRICT
   10  OR A CITY  SCHOOL  DISTRICT  IN  A  CITY  WITH  LESS  THAN  ONE  HUNDRED
   11  TWENTY-FIVE THOUSAND INHABITANTS, UPON FILING OF A VALID PETITION PURSU-
   12  ANT  TO  PARAGRAPH  B  OF  THIS SUBDIVISION, MAY VOTE TO IMPOSE TAX LEVY
   13  LIMITS FOR THE ENSUING SCHOOL YEAR THAT ARE MORE RESTRICTIVE THAN  THOSE
   14  OTHERWISE IMPOSED BY SECTION THIRTEEN HUNDRED SEVEN OF THE REAL PROPERTY
   15  TAX LAW.  NO SUCH VOTE SHALL APPLY TO MORE THAN ONE SCHOOL YEAR.
   16    B. UPON THE FILING WITH THE TRUSTEE, TRUSTEES OR BOARD OF EDUCATION OF
   17  ONE  OR  MORE  PETITIONS PURSUANT TO THIS SUBDIVISION REQUESTING THAT AN
   18  UNDERRIDE PROPOSITION BE SUBMITTED FOR A  VOTE  AT  A  SPECIAL  DISTRICT
   19  MEETING,  SUCH OFFICERS SHALL CALL A SPECIAL DISTRICT MEETING TO BE HELD
   20  ON THE FIRST TUESDAY IN MAY, OR THE LAST TUESDAY IN  APRIL  WHERE  THERE
   21  WOULD  BE  A CONFLICT WITH RELIGIOUS OBSERVANCES, IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE
   22  APPLICABLE PROVISIONS OF SUBDIVISION THREE OF SECTION TWO THOUSAND SEVEN
   23  OR SUBDIVISION THREE OF SECTION TWO THOUSAND SIX OF  THIS  ARTICLE,  FOR
   24  THE  PURPOSE OF SUBMITTING TO THE QUALIFIED VOTERS AN UNDERRIDE PROPOSI-
   25  TION. SUCH OFFICERS SHALL SUBMIT FOR A VOTE OF THE QUALIFIED VOTERS  THE
   26  PROPOSITION  THAT WAS SIGNED BY THE GREATEST NUMBER OF QUALIFIED VOTERS,
   27  OR, IF THERE IS A TIE, THE PROPOSITION SIGNED BY THE GREATEST NUMBER  OF
   28  QUALIFIED  VOTERS  THAT  WAS  FILED  FIRST.  A PETITION FOR AN UNDERRIDE
   29  PROPOSITION SHALL BE SIGNED BY: (I) AT LEAST TEN PERCENT OF  THE  REGIS-
   30  TERED  VOTERS  OF  THE SCHOOL DISTRICT BASED ON THE REGISTER PREPARED AT
   31  THE LAST ANNUAL MEETING AND ELECTION OF THE SCHOOL DISTRICT; OR (II)  IF
   32  THE  SCHOOL  DISTRICT  DOES NOT PROVIDE FOR THE PERSONAL REGISTRATION OF
   33  VOTERS, BY TWO HUNDRED FIFTY QUALIFIED VOTERS OR TWENTY PERCENT  OF  THE
   34  NUMBER  OF  VOTERS  WHO  VOTED  IN  THE  PREVIOUS ANNUAL ELECTION OF THE
   35  MEMBERS OF THE BOARD OF EDUCATION OR TRUSTEES, WHICHEVER IS LESS.   SUCH
   36  PETITION  SHALL  BE  FILED  IN  THE  OFFICE OF THE CLERK OF THE DISTRICT
   37  BETWEEN THE HOURS OF NINE A.M. AND FIVE P.M., NOT LATER THAN THE TWENTI-
   38  ETH DAY PRECEDING THE SPECIAL DISTRICT MEETING  AT  WHICH  AN  UNDERRIDE
   39  VOTE MAY OCCUR.
   40    C.  WHERE  A  PROPOSITION  TO UNDERRIDE A TAX LEVY LIMITATION IS TO BE
   41  SUBMITTED FOR A VOTE AT A  SPECIAL  DISTRICT  MEETING  CALLED  FOR  THIS
   42  PURPOSE,  THE  CLERK  OF  THE DISTRICT SHALL GIVE NOTICE OF THE TIME AND
   43  PLACE OF THE SPECIAL DISTRICT MEETING BY PUBLISHING A  NOTICE  AT  LEAST
   44  FOURTEEN DAYS PRIOR TO THE SPECIAL DISTRICT MEETING IN TWO NEWSPAPERS IF
   45  THERE  SHALL  BE  TWO,  OR  IN  ONE NEWSPAPER IF THERE SHALL BE BUT ONE,
   46  HAVING GENERAL CIRCULATION WITHIN SUCH DISTRICT, PROVIDED, HOWEVER, THAT
   47  IF THERE IS NO NEWSPAPER HAVING GENERAL CIRCULATION WITHIN THE DISTRICT,
   48  THE SAID NOTICE SHALL BE POSTED IN AT LEAST TWENTY OF  THE  MOST  PUBLIC
   49  PLACES IN SAID DISTRICT FOURTEEN DAYS BEFORE THE TIME OF SUCH MEETING.
   50    D.  AN  UNDERRIDE  PROPOSITION  SHALL  BE  A  SEPARATE  PROPOSITION IN
   51  SUBSTANTIALLY THE FOLLOWING FORM:
   52    "SHALL THE            SCHOOL DISTRICT BE REQUIRED TO IMPOSE A TAX LEVY
   53  FOR THE      SCHOOL YEAR, EXCLUDING ANY CAPITAL TAX  LEVY,  THAT  IS  NO
   54  GREATER  THAN       ,  EVEN THOUGH THE STATUTORY TAX LEVY LIMIT FOR THAT
   55  SCHOOL YEAR IS       ?"
       S. 5                                5                               A. 5
    1    E. AN UNDERRIDE PROPOSITION SHALL BE APPROVED IF OVER FIFTY PERCENT OF
    2  THE VOTES CAST THEREON ARE IN THE AFFIRMATIVE. IF SUCH UNDERRIDE  PROPO-
    3  SITION  IS  APPROVED BY THE QUALIFIED VOTERS, THE TAX LEVY LIMIT IMPOSED
    4  THEREBY SHALL BE DEEMED TO BE THE TAX LEVY LIMIT FOR THE SCHOOL DISTRICT
    5  FOR  THE  COMING  SCHOOL  YEAR  FOR PURPOSES OF SECTION THIRTEEN HUNDRED
    6  SEVEN OF THE REAL PROPERTY TAX LAW, AND THE TRUSTEES OR BOARD OF  EDUCA-
    7  TION  SHALL  ADOPT A BUDGET THAT COMPLIES WITH SUCH TAX LEVY LIMIT. UPON
    8  APPROVAL OF AN UNDERRIDE PROPOSITION, NO OTHER TAX LEVY PROPOSITION  MAY
    9  BE SUBMITTED TO THE VOTERS FOR THAT SAME SCHOOL YEAR.
   10    3.  A.  UNLESS  AN UNDERRIDE PROPOSITION HAS BEEN APPROVED PURSUANT TO
   11  SUBDIVISION TWO OF THIS SECTION,  THE  TRUSTEE,  TRUSTEES  OR  BOARD  OF
   12  EDUCATION  OF  A SCHOOL DISTRICT SHALL PRESENT AT THE ANNUAL MEETING AND
   13  ELECTION A TAX LEVY PROPOSITION IN SUBSTANTIALLY THE FOLLOWING FORM:
   14    "SHALL THE            SCHOOL DISTRICT BE AUTHORIZED TO  IMPOSE  A  TAX
   15  LEVY  FOR  THE        SCHOOL  YEAR,  EXCLUDING  ANY  CAPITAL  TAX  LEVY,
   16  OF       , WHEN THE STATUTORY  TAX  LEVY  LIMIT  FOR  THAT  SCHOOL  YEAR
   17  IS       ?"
   18    B.  EXCEPT  AS OTHERWISE PROVIDED IN SECTION THIRTEEN HUNDRED SEVEN OF
   19  THE REAL PROPERTY TAX LAW, IF THE PROPOSED TAX LEVY DOES NOT EXCEED  THE
   20  TAX  LEVY LIMIT DETERMINED PURSUANT TO SECTION THIRTEEN HUNDRED SEVEN OF
   21  THE REAL PROPERTY TAX LAW, THEN THE PROPOSITION  SHALL  BE  APPROVED  IF
   22  OVER  FIFTY PERCENT OF THE VOTES CAST THEREON ARE IN THE AFFIRMATIVE. IF
   23  THE PROPOSED TAX LEVY WOULD EXCEED THE TAX LEVY LIMIT DETERMINED  PURSU-
   24  ANT TO SECTION THIRTEEN HUNDRED SEVEN OF THE REAL PROPERTY TAX LAW, THEN
   25  THE  VOTING MARGIN NECESSARY FOR SUCH A PROPOSITION TO BE APPROVED SHALL
   26  BE AS FOLLOWS:
   27    (I) IF THE GENERAL PURPOSE STATE AID PAYABLE TO  THE  SCHOOL  DISTRICT
   28  FOR  THE  ENSUING  YEAR IS TO INCREASE BY FIVE PERCENT OR MORE OVER SUCH
   29  AID FOR THE PRIOR YEAR, THEN NO LESS THAN SIXTY  PERCENT  OF  THE  VOTES
   30  CAST  ON  THE PROPOSITION BY QUALIFIED VOTERS MUST BE IN THE AFFIRMATIVE
   31  IN ORDER FOR THE PROPOSITION TO BE APPROVED.
   32    (II) IF THE GENERAL PURPOSE STATE AID PAYABLE TO THE  SCHOOL  DISTRICT
   33  FOR  THE  ENSUING  SCHOOL  YEAR IS TO INCREASE BY LESS THAN FIVE PERCENT
   34  OVER SUCH AID FOR THE PRIOR YEAR, THEN NO LESS THAN  FIFTY-FIVE  PERCENT
   35  OF THE VOTES CAST ON THE PROPOSITION MUST BE IN THE AFFIRMATIVE IN ORDER
   36  FOR THE PROPOSITION TO BE APPROVED.
   37    (III) IF THE AMOUNT OF GENERAL PURPOSE STATE AID WHICH WILL BE PAYABLE
   38  TO  A  SCHOOL DISTRICT FOR THE COMING SCHOOL YEAR HAS NOT BEEN CERTIFIED
   39  BY THE DIRECTOR OF THE BUDGET, THEN OVER FIFTY PERCENT OF THE VOTES CAST
   40  ON THE PROPOSITION BY QUALIFIED VOTERS MUST BE  IN  THE  AFFIRMATIVE  IN
   41  ORDER FOR THE PROPOSITION TO BE APPROVED.
   42    C.  IF  THE  TAX LEVY PROPOSITION IS APPROVED BY THE QUALIFIED VOTERS,
   43  THE TAX LEVY LIMIT IMPOSED THEREBY SHALL BE DEEMED TO BE  THE  TAX  LEVY
   44  LIMIT  FOR THE SCHOOL DISTRICT FOR THE COMING SCHOOL YEAR, AND THE TRUS-
   45  TEES OR BOARD OF EDUCATION SHALL ADOPT A BUDGET THAT COMPLIES WITH  SUCH
   46  TAX LEVY LIMIT. IF, HOWEVER, THE TAX LEVY PROPOSITION IS NOT APPROVED BY
   47  THE  QUALIFIED  VOTERS,  THEN  THE  TRUSTEES OR BOARD OF EDUCATION SHALL
   48  ADOPT A BUDGET THAT REQUIRES A TAX LEVY EXCLUDING ANY CAPITAL TAX  LEVY,
   49  THAT IS NO GREATER THAN THE TAX LEVY BASE DETERMINED PURSUANT TO SECTION
   50  THIRTEEN HUNDRED SEVEN OF THE REAL PROPERTY TAX LAW.
   51    S  3. Subdivisions 1 and 3 of section 416 of the education law, subdi-
   52  vision 1 as amended by chapter 687 of the laws of 1949 and subdivision 3
   53  as amended by chapter 171 of the laws of 1996, are amended  to  read  as
   54  follows:
   55    1. A majority of the voters of any school district, present and voting
   56  at  any annual or special district meeting, duly convened, may authorize
       S. 5                                6                               A. 5
    1  such acts and vote such taxes as they shall deem  expedient  for  making
    2  additions,  alterations, repairs or improvements, to the sites or build-
    3  ings belonging to the  district,  or  for  altering  and  equipping  for
    4  library use any former schoolhouse belonging to the district, or for the
    5  purchase  of  other sites or buildings, or for a change of sites, or for
    6  the purchase of land and buildings  for  agricultural,  athletic,  play-
    7  ground  or social center purposes, or for the erection of new buildings,
    8  or for building a bus garage, or for [buying apparatus,  implements,  or
    9  fixtures,  or  for  paying  the  wages  of  teachers,  and the necessary
   10  expenses of the school, or for the purpose of paying  any  judgment,  or
   11  for] the payment or refunding of an outstanding bonded indebtedness[, or
   12  for such other purpose relating to the support and welfare of the school
   13  as they may, by resolution, approve].
   14    3.  No  addition to or change of site or purchase of a new site or tax
   15  for the purchase of any new site or structure, or for grading or improv-
   16  ing a school site, or for the purchase of an addition to the site of any
   17  schoolhouse, or for the purchase of lands  and  buildings  for  agricul-
   18  tural,  athletic,  playground or social center purposes, or for building
   19  any new schoolhouse or for the erection of an addition  to  any  school-
   20  house  already  built, or for the payment or refunding of an outstanding
   21  bonded indebtedness, shall be voted at any such meeting in a union  free
   22  school  district or a city school district [which conducts annual budget
   23  votes in accordance with article forty-one of this chapter  pursuant  to
   24  section  twenty-six  hundred  one-a of this chapter] IN A CITY WITH LESS
   25  THAN ONE HUNDRED TWENTY-FIVE THOUSAND INHABITANTS, unless  a  notice  by
   26  the board of education stating that such tax will be proposed, and spec-
   27  ifying  the object thereof and the amount to be expended therefor, shall
   28  have been given in the manner provided herein for the notice of an annu-
   29  al meeting. In a common school district the notice of a special  meeting
   30  to authorize any of the improvements enumerated in this section shall be
   31  given  as provided in [section two thousand six] THIS CHAPTER. The board
   32  of education of a union free school district or a city  school  district
   33  [which conducts annual budget votes in accordance with article forty-one
   34  of  this  chapter  pursuant  to section twenty-six hundred one-a of this
   35  chapter] IN A CITY WITH  LESS  THAN  ONE  HUNDRED  TWENTY-FIVE  THOUSAND
   36  INHABITANTS, may determine that the vote upon any question to be submit-
   37  ted at a special meeting as provided in this section shall be by ballot,
   38  in  which  case it shall state in the notice of such special meeting the
   39  hours during which the polls shall be kept open. Printed ballots may  be
   40  prepared  by  the board in advance of the meeting and the proposition or
   41  propositions called for in the notice of the meeting may be submitted in
   42  substantially the same manner as propositions to  be  voted  upon  at  a
   43  general election.
   44    S  4.  Subdivisions 14, 15, 18 and 24 of section 1604 of the education
   45  law, subdivisions 14 and 18 as amended by chapter 654  of  the  laws  of
   46  1953, are amended to read as follows:
   47    14.  To  keep  each  of  the  schoolhouses under their charge, and its
   48  furniture, school apparatus and appurtenances, in necessary  and  proper
   49  repair, and make the same reasonably comfortable for use[, but shall not
   50  expend  therefor  without  vote  of the district an amount to exceed one
   51  hundred dollars in any one year].
   52    15. To make any repairs and  abate  any  nuisances,  pursuant  to  the
   53  direction of the district superintendent as herein provided, and provide
   54  fuel,  stoves or other heating apparatus, pails, brooms and other imple-
   55  ments necessary to keep the schoolhouses and the schoolrooms clean,  and
   56  make  them  reasonably  comfortable for use[, when no provision has been
       S. 5                                7                               A. 5
    1  made therefor by a vote of  the  district,  or  the  sum  voted  by  the
    2  district for said purposes shall have proved insufficient].
    3    18.  To  [expend  in  the]  purchase [of] a dictionary, books, reprod-
    4  uctions of standard works of art, maps, globes or other  school  appara-
    5  tus,  including  implements,  apparatus  and supplies for instruction in
    6  agriculture, or for conducting athletic playgrounds  and  social  center
    7  activities[,  a sum not exceeding fifty dollars in any one year, without
    8  a vote of the district].
    9    24. To furnish lighting facilities, janitorial  care  and  supervision
   10  for  highway underpasses [when authorized to do so by vote of a district
   11  meeting under the provisions of subdivision twenty of section two  thou-
   12  sand fifteen of this chapter].
   13    S  5.  Section  1608  of the education law, as amended by section 5 of
   14  part A of chapter 436 of the laws of  1997,  subdivisions  2  and  4  as
   15  amended  by chapter 640 of the laws of 2008, subdivision 7 as amended by
   16  section 4 of part H of chapter 83 of the laws of 2002 and paragraph a of
   17  subdivision 7 as amended by chapter 238 of the laws of 2007, is  amended
   18  to read as follows:
   19    S  1608.  Estimated expenses for ensuing year. 1. It shall be the duty
   20  of the trustees of each common school district to present at the  annual
   21  budget  hearing  a  detailed statement in writing of the amount of money
   22  which will be required for the ensuing year for school purposes,  speci-
   23  fying the several purposes and the amount for each.  WHERE A PROPOSITION
   24  TO UNDERRIDE A TAX LEVY LIMITATION HAS BEEN APPROVED PURSUANT TO SECTION
   25  TWO  THOUSAND TWENTY-THREE-A OF THIS CHAPTER, THE TRUSTEES SHALL PRESENT
   26  AT THE ANNUAL BUDGET HEARING A BUDGET THAT COMPLIES  WITH  THE  APPROVED
   27  UNDERRIDE  PROPOSITION.  The amount for each purpose estimated necessary
   28  for payments to boards of  cooperative  educational  services  shall  be
   29  shown  in  full, with no deduction of estimated state aid. The amount of
   30  state aid provided and its percentage relationship to the total expendi-
   31  tures shall also be shown.  This  section  shall  not  be  construed  to
   32  prevent  the trustees from presenting such statement at a budget hearing
   33  held not less than seven nor more than fourteen days prior to a  special
   34  meeting  called for the purpose, nor from presenting a supplementary and
   35  amended statement or estimate at any time.
   36    2. Such statement shall be completed at least seven  days  before  the
   37  budget  hearing  at which it is to be presented and copies thereof shall
   38  be prepared and made available, upon request and at the school  district
   39  offices,  at  any  public library or free association library within the
   40  district and on the school district's internet website, if  one  exists,
   41  to  residents  within  the  district  during the period of fourteen days
   42  immediately preceding  the  annual  meeting  [and  election  or  special
   43  district  meeting at which the budget vote will occur] and at such meet-
   44  ing or hearing. The board shall also as a part of the notice required by
   45  section two thousand three of this chapter give notice of the date, time
   46  and place of the budget hearing and that a copy of such statement may be
   47  obtained by any resident in the district  at  each  schoolhouse  in  the
   48  district  in  which school is maintained during certain designated hours
   49  on each day other than a Saturday, Sunday or holiday during the fourteen
   50  days immediately preceding such meeting. The board shall include  notice
   51  of  the  availability  of such statement at least once during the school
   52  year in any district-wide mailing distributed.
   53    3. Commencing with the proposed budget for the nineteen hundred  nine-
   54  ty-seven--ninety-eight  school  year,  such  proposed budget shall be in
   55  plain language and shall be consistent with regulations  promulgated  by
   56  the  commissioner  pursuant  to  subdivision twenty-six of section three
       S. 5                                8                               A. 5
    1  hundred five of this chapter. Categorization of and format for  revenue,
    2  including  payments in lieu of taxes, property tax refunds from certior-
    3  ari proceedings, expenditure, transfer, and fund balance information and
    4  changes  in  such data from the prior year and, in the case of [a resub-
    5  mitted or] AN amended budget, changes in such information from the prior
    6  year's submitted budget, shall be complete and accurate and set forth in
    7  such a manner as to best promote public comprehension and readability.
    8    4. Commencing with the proposed budget for the nineteen hundred  nine-
    9  ty-eight--ninety-nine   school  year,  such  proposed  budget  shall  be
   10  presented in three components: a program component, a capital  component
   11  and  an administrative component which shall be separately delineated in
   12  accordance with regulations of the commissioner after consultation  with
   13  local  school  district  officials.  The  administrative component shall
   14  include, but need not be limited to, office and  central  administrative
   15  expenses, traveling expenses and all compensation, salaries and benefits
   16  of  all school administrators and supervisors, including business admin-
   17  istrators, superintendents of schools and deputy,  assistant,  associate
   18  or  other  superintendents  under  all  existing employment contracts or
   19  collective bargaining agreements, any and  all  expenditures  associated
   20  with  the  operation  of the office of trustee or board of trustees, the
   21  office of the superintendent of  schools,  general  administration,  the
   22  school  business office, consulting costs not directly related to direct
   23  student services and programs, planning  and  all  other  administrative
   24  activities. The program component shall include, but need not be limited
   25  to, all program expenditures of the school district, including the sala-
   26  ries  and benefits of teachers and any school administrators or supervi-
   27  sors who spend a majority of their time performing teaching duties,  and
   28  all  transportation  operating  expenses.    The capital component shall
   29  include, but need not be limited to, all  transportation  capital,  debt
   30  service,  and  lease expenditures; costs resulting from judgments in tax
   31  certiorari proceedings or the payment of awards  from  court  judgments,
   32  administrative  orders or settled or compromised claims; and all facili-
   33  ties costs of the school district, including facilities  lease  expendi-
   34  tures,  the  annual  debt  service  and  total  debt  for all facilities
   35  financed by bonds and notes of the school district,  and  the  costs  of
   36  construction, acquisition, reconstruction, rehabilitation or improvement
   37  of  school  buildings, provided that such budget shall include a rental,
   38  operations and maintenance section that includes base rent costs,  total
   39  rent  costs, operation and maintenance charges, cost per square foot for
   40  each facility leased by the school district, and any  and  all  expendi-
   41  tures   associated   with   custodial  salaries  and  benefits,  service
   42  contracts, supplies, utilities, and maintenance and  repairs  of  school
   43  facilities.  [For  the  purposes  of the development of a budget for the
   44  nineteen hundred ninety-eight--ninety-nine school year, the  trustee  or
   45  board  of  trustees  shall  separate the district's program, capital and
   46  administrative costs for the nineteen hundred ninety-seven--ninety-eight
   47  school year in the manner as if  the  budget  for  such  year  had  been
   48  presented in three components.]
   49    5.  The  trustee or board of trustees shall append to the statement of
   50  estimated expenditures a detailed statement of the total compensation to
   51  be paid to the superintendent of schools, and any assistant or associate
   52  superintendents of schools in  the  ensuing  school  year,  including  a
   53  delineation  of  the salary, annualized cost of benefits and any in-kind
   54  or other form of remuneration. The trustees shall also append a list  of
   55  all  other  school  administrators and supervisors, if any, whose annual
   56  salary will be eighty-five thousand  dollars  or  more  in  the  ensuing
       S. 5                                9                               A. 5
    1  school year, with the title of their positions and annual salary identi-
    2  fied;  provided  however,  that  the commissioner may adjust such salary
    3  level to reflect increases in administrative salaries after June thirti-
    4  eth,  nineteen hundred ninety-eight. The trustees shall submit a copy of
    5  such list and statement, in a form prescribed by  the  commissioner,  of
    6  compensation  to  the commissioner within five days after their prepara-
    7  tion. The commissioner shall compile such data, together with  the  data
    8  submitted  pursuant  to  subdivision  three of section seventeen hundred
    9  sixteen of this chapter, into  a  single  statewide  compilation,  which
   10  shall  be  made  available  to  the governor, the legislature, and other
   11  interested parties upon request.
   12    6. Each year, the board of education shall prepare a  school  district
   13  report card, pursuant to regulations of the commissioner, and shall make
   14  it  publicly available by transmitting it to local newspapers of general
   15  circulation, appending it to copies of the proposed budget made publicly
   16  available as required by law, making it available  for  distribution  at
   17  the  annual  meeting,  and otherwise disseminating it as required by the
   18  commissioner. Such report card shall include measures  of  the  academic
   19  performance  of  the  school  district, on a school by school basis, and
   20  measures of the fiscal performance of the district, as prescribed by the
   21  commissioner. Pursuant to regulations of the  commissioner,  the  report
   22  card  shall  also  compare  these measures to statewide averages for all
   23  public schools, and statewide averages for public schools of  comparable
   24  wealth  and  need, developed by the commissioner. Such report card shall
   25  include, at a minimum, any information on the school district  regarding
   26  pupil  performance  and expenditure per pupil required to be included in
   27  the annual report by the regents to the  governor  and  the  legislature
   28  pursuant to section two hundred fifteen-a of this chapter; and any other
   29  information  required  by the commissioner. School districts (i) identi-
   30  fied as having fifteen percent or more  of  their  students  in  special
   31  education,  or  (ii)  which have fifty percent or more of their students
   32  with disabilities  in  special  education  programs  or  services  sixty
   33  percent  or  more  of the school day in a general education building, or
   34  (iii) which have eight percent or more of their students with  disabili-
   35  ties  in special education programs in public or private separate educa-
   36  tional settings shall indicate on  their  school  district  report  card
   37  their respective percentages as defined in this [subparagraph] PARAGRAPH
   38  and [subparagraphs] PARAGRAPHS (i) and (ii) of this [paragraph] SUBDIVI-
   39  SION as compared to the statewide average.
   40    7. a. Each year, commencing with the proposed budget for the two thou-
   41  sand--two  thousand  one  school  year, the trustee or board of trustees
   42  shall prepare a property tax report card, pursuant to regulations of the
   43  commissioner, and shall make it publicly available by transmitting it to
   44  local newspapers of general circulation, appending it to copies  of  the
   45  proposed  budget  made  publicly available as required by law, making it
   46  available for distribution at the annual [meeting] BUDGET  HEARING,  and
   47  otherwise  disseminating it as required by the commissioner. Such report
   48  card shall include: (i) the amount of total spending and total estimated
   49  school tax levy that would result from adoption of the  proposed  budget
   50  and  the  percentage  increase  or  decrease in total spending and total
   51  school tax levy from the school district budget for the preceding school
   52  year; and (ii) THE DISTRICT'S TAX LEVY LIMIT AND TAX  LEVY  BASE  DETER-
   53  MINED  PURSUANT  TO  SECTION THIRTEEN HUNDRED SEVEN OF THE REAL PROPERTY
   54  TAX LAW, THE TAX LEVY PROPOSED BY THE DISTRICT, THE PROPOSED CAPITAL TAX
   55  LEVY, IF ANY; AND (III) the projected enrollment growth for  the  school
   56  year  for  which  the  budget  is prepared, and the percentage change in
       S. 5                               10                               A. 5
    1  enrollment from the previous year; and  [(iii)]    (IV)  the  percentage
    2  increase  in the consumer price index, as defined in paragraph c of this
    3  subdivision; and [(iv)] (V) the projected amount of  the  unappropriated
    4  unreserved  fund balance that will be retained if the proposed budget is
    5  adopted, the projected amount of the reserved fund balance, the project-
    6  ed amount of the  appropriated  fund  balance,  the  percentage  of  the
    7  proposed  budget that the unappropriated unreserved fund balance repres-
    8  ents, the actual unappropriated unreserved fund balance retained in  the
    9  school district budget for the preceding school year, and the percentage
   10  of  the  school  district  budget for the preceding school year that the
   11  actual unappropriated unreserved fund balance represents.
   12    b. A copy of the property tax report  card  prepared  for  the  annual
   13  [district  meeting]  BUDGET HEARING shall be submitted to the department
   14  in the manner prescribed by the department by the end  of  the  business
   15  day  next  following approval of the report card by the trustee or board
   16  of trustees, but no later than twenty-four days prior to  the  statewide
   17  uniform  voting  day.  The  department  shall  compile such data for all
   18  school districts [whose budgets are subject to a vote of  the  qualified
   19  voters]  SUBJECT  TO  A TAX LEVY LIMITATION PURSUANT TO SECTION THIRTEEN
   20  HUNDRED SEVEN OF THE REAL PROPERTY TAX LAW and shall make such  compila-
   21  tion  available  electronically at least ten days prior to the statewide
   22  uniform voting day.
   23    c. For purposes of  this  subdivision,  "percentage  increase  in  the
   24  consumer  price  index"  shall  mean  the percentage that represents the
   25  product of one hundred and the quotient  of:  (i)  the  average  of  the
   26  national  consumer price indexes determined by the United States depart-
   27  ment of labor for the twelve-month period preceding January first of the
   28  current year minus the average of the national  consumer  price  indexes
   29  determined by the United States department of labor for the twelve-month
   30  period  preceding  January  first of the prior year, divided by (ii) the
   31  average of the national consumer price indexes determined by the  United
   32  States department of labor for the twelve-month period preceding January
   33  first  of  the prior year, with the result expressed as a decimal to two
   34  places.
   35    S 6. Subdivisions 22 and 28 of section  1709  of  the  education  law,
   36  subdivision  22  as  amended  by  chapter  682  of the laws of 2002, are
   37  amended to read as follows:
   38    22. To provide, purchase, lease, furnish  and  maintain  buildings  or
   39  other suitable accommodations for the use of teachers or other employees
   40  of  the  district  [when  duly authorized by a meeting of the district],
   41  SUBJECT TO APPROVAL OF THE VOTERS WHERE OTHERWISE REQUIRED BY  LAW,  and
   42  to  raise  by  tax  upon the taxable property of the district and moneys
   43  necessary for such purposes; and also to provide, maintain and operate a
   44  cafeteria or restaurant service for the use of pupils and teachers while
   45  at school. Such cafeteria may  be  used  by  the  community  for  school
   46  related  functions  and  activities  and to furnish meals to the elderly
   47  residents, sixty years of age or older, of the district.  Such CAFETERIA
   48  OR RESTAURANT SERVICE AND SUCH  utilization  shall  be  subject  to  the
   49  approval of the board of education.  Charges shall be sufficient to meet
   50  the direct cost of preparing and serving such meals, reducible by avail-
   51  able reimbursements.
   52    28.  To  furnish  lighting facilities, janitorial care and supervision
   53  for highway underpasses [when authorized to do so by vote of a  district
   54  meeting  under the provisions of subdivision twenty of section two thou-
   55  sand fifteen of this chapter].
       S. 5                               11                               A. 5
    1    S 7. Section 1716 of the education law, as amended  by  section  7  of
    2  part  A  of  chapter  436  of  the laws of 1997, subdivisions 2 and 4 as
    3  amended by chapter 640 of the laws of 2008, subdivision 7 as amended  by
    4  section 5 of part H of chapter 83 of the laws of 2002 and paragraph a of
    5  subdivision  7 as amended by chapter 238 of the laws of 2007, is amended
    6  to read as follows:
    7    S 1716. Estimated expenses for ensuing year. 1. It shall be  the  duty
    8  of  the  board  of  education  of each district to present at the annual
    9  budget hearing a detailed statement in writing of the  amount  of  money
   10  which  will be required for the ensuing year for school purposes, speci-
   11  fying the several purposes and the amount for each.  WHERE A PROPOSITION
   12  TO UNDERRIDE A TAX LEVY LIMITATION HAS BEEN APPROVED PURSUANT TO SECTION
   13  TWO THOUSAND TWENTY-THREE-A OF THIS  CHAPTER,  THE  BOARD  OF  EDUCATION
   14  SHALL  PRESENT  AT THE ANNUAL BUDGET HEARING A BUDGET THAT COMPLIES WITH
   15  THE APPROVED UNDERRIDE PROPOSITION. The amount for  each  purpose  esti-
   16  mated  necessary  for  payments  to  boards  of  cooperative educational
   17  services shall be shown in full, with no deduction  of  estimated  state
   18  aid. The amount of state aid provided and its percentage relationship to
   19  the  total  expenditures  shall also be shown. This section shall not be
   20  construed to prevent the board from presenting such statement at a budg-
   21  et hearing held not less than seven nor more than fourteen days prior to
   22  a special meeting called for the purpose, nor from presenting a  supple-
   23  mentary and amended statement or estimate at any time.
   24    2.  Such  statement  shall be completed at least seven days before the
   25  budget hearing at which it is to be presented and copies  thereof  shall
   26  be  prepared and made available, upon request and at the school district
   27  offices, at any public library or free association  library  within  the
   28  district  and  on the school district's internet website, if one exists,
   29  to residents within the district during  the  period  of  fourteen  days
   30  immediately  preceding  the  annual  meeting  [and  election  or special
   31  district meeting at which the budget vote will occur] and at such  meet-
   32  ing or hearing. The board shall also as a part of the notice required by
   33  section  two thousand four of this chapter give notice of the date, time
   34  and place of the budget hearing and that a copy of such statement may be
   35  obtained by any resident in the district  at  each  schoolhouse  in  the
   36  district  in  which school is maintained during certain designated hours
   37  on each day other than a Saturday, Sunday or holiday during the fourteen
   38  days immediately preceding such meeting. The board shall include  notice
   39  of  the  availability  of such statement at least once during the school
   40  year in any district-wide mailing distributed.
   41    3. Commencing with the proposed budget for the nineteen hundred  nine-
   42  ty-seven--ninety-eight  school  year,  such  proposed budget shall be in
   43  plain language and shall be consistent with regulations  promulgated  by
   44  the  commissioner  pursuant  to  subdivision twenty-six of section three
   45  hundred five of this chapter. Categorization of and format for  revenue,
   46  including  payments in lieu of taxes, property tax refunds from certior-
   47  ari proceedings, expenditure, transfer, and fund balance information and
   48  changes in such data from the prior year and, in the case of  [a  resub-
   49  mitted or] AN amended budget, changes in such information from the prior
   50  year  submitted  budget, shall be complete and accurate and set forth in
   51  such a manner as to best promote public comprehension and readability.
   52    4. Commencing with the proposed budget for the nineteen hundred  nine-
   53  ty-eight--ninety-nine   school  year,  such  proposed  budget  shall  be
   54  presented in three components: a program component, a capital  component
   55  and  an administrative component which shall be separately delineated in
   56  accordance with regulations of the commissioner after consultation  with
       S. 5                               12                               A. 5
    1  local  school  district  officials.  The  administrative component shall
    2  include, but need not be limited to, office and  central  administrative
    3  expenses, traveling expenses and all compensation, salaries and benefits
    4  of  all school administrators and supervisors, including business admin-
    5  istrators, superintendents of schools and deputy,  assistant,  associate
    6  or  other  superintendents  under  all  existing employment contracts or
    7  collective bargaining agreements, any and  all  expenditures  associated
    8  with  the  operation of the board of education, the office of the super-
    9  intendent  of  schools,  general  administration,  the  school  business
   10  office, consulting costs not directly related to direct student services
   11  and  programs,  planning  and  all other administrative activities.  The
   12  program component shall include, but need not be limited to, all program
   13  expenditures of the school district, including the salaries and benefits
   14  of teachers and any school administrators or  supervisors  who  spend  a
   15  majority  of  their time performing teaching duties, and all transporta-
   16  tion operating expenses. The capital component shall include,  but  need
   17  not  be  limited to, all transportation capital, debt service, and lease
   18  expenditures;  costs  resulting  from  judgments   in   tax   certiorari
   19  proceedings  or  the payment of awards from court judgments, administra-
   20  tive orders or settled or compromised claims; and all  facilities  costs
   21  of  the  school  district,  including facilities lease expenditures, the
   22  annual debt service and total debt for all facilities financed by  bonds
   23  and  notes of the school district, and the costs of construction, acqui-
   24  sition, reconstruction, rehabilitation or improvement of  school  build-
   25  ings,  provided  that such budget shall include a rental, operations and
   26  maintenance section that includes base rent  costs,  total  rent  costs,
   27  operation and maintenance charges, cost per square foot for each facili-
   28  ty  leased  by the school district, and any and all expenditures associ-
   29  ated with custodial salaries and benefits, service contracts,  supplies,
   30  utilities,  and  maintenance  and repairs of school facilities. [For the
   31  purposes of the development of a budget for the nineteen  hundred  nine-
   32  ty-eight--ninety-nine school year, the board of education shall separate
   33  the  district's  program, capital and administrative costs for the nine-
   34  teen hundred ninety-seven--ninety-eight school year in the manner as  if
   35  the budget for such year had been presented in three components.]
   36    5.  The  board of education shall append to the statement of estimated
   37  expenditures a detailed statement of the total compensation to  be  paid
   38  to  the superintendent of schools, and any assistant or associate super-
   39  intendents of schools in the ensuing school year,  including  a  deline-
   40  ation  of  the  salary,  annualized  cost of benefits and any in-kind or
   41  other form of remuneration. The board shall also append a  list  of  all
   42  other school administrators and supervisors, if any, whose annual salary
   43  will be eighty-five thousand dollars or more in the ensuing school year,
   44  with the title of their positions and annual salary identified; provided
   45  however,  that  the commissioner may adjust such salary level to reflect
   46  increases in administrative  salaries  after  June  thirtieth,  nineteen
   47  hundred ninety-eight. The board of education shall submit a copy of such
   48  list and statement, in a form prescribed by the commissioner, of compen-
   49  sation to the commissioner within five days after their preparation. The
   50  commissioner  shall  compile such data, together with the data submitted
   51  pursuant to subdivision four of section sixteen hundred  eight  of  this
   52  [chapter]  TITLE,  into  a  single statewide compilation, which shall be
   53  made available to the governor, the legislature,  and  other  interested
   54  parties upon request.
   55    6.  Each  year, the board of education shall prepare a school district
   56  report card, pursuant to regulations of the commissioner, and shall make
       S. 5                               13                               A. 5
    1  it publicly available by transmitting it to local newspapers of  general
    2  circulation, appending it to copies of the proposed budget made publicly
    3  available  as  required  by law, making it available for distribution at
    4  the  annual  meeting,  and otherwise disseminating it as required by the
    5  commissioner. Such report card shall include measures  of  the  academic
    6  performance  of  the  school  district, on a school by school basis, and
    7  measures of the fiscal performance of the district, as prescribed by the
    8  commissioner. Pursuant to regulations of the  commissioner,  the  report
    9  card  shall  also  compare  these measures to statewide averages for all
   10  public schools, and statewide averages for public schools of  comparable
   11  wealth  and  need, developed by the commissioner. Such report card shall
   12  include, at a minimum, any information of the school district  regarding
   13  pupil  performance  and expenditure per pupil required to be included in
   14  the annual report by the regents to the  governor  and  the  legislature
   15  pursuant to section two hundred fifteen-a of this chapter; and any other
   16  information  required  by the commissioner. School districts (i) identi-
   17  fied as having fifteen percent or more  of  their  students  in  special
   18  education,  or  (ii)  which have fifty percent or more of their students
   19  with disabilities  in  special  education  programs  or  services  sixty
   20  percent  or  more  of the school day in a general education building, or
   21  (iii) which have eight percent or more of their students with  disabili-
   22  ties  in special education programs in public or private separate educa-
   23  tional settings shall indicate on  their  school  district  report  card
   24  their respective percentages as defined in this paragraph and paragraphs
   25  (i) and (ii) of this subdivision as compared to the statewide average.
   26    7. a. Each year, commencing with the proposed budget for the two thou-
   27  sand--two thousand one school year, the board of education shall prepare
   28  a property tax report card, pursuant to regulations of the commissioner,
   29  and shall make it publicly available by transmitting it to local newspa-
   30  pers  of  general  circulation,  appending  it to copies of the proposed
   31  budget made publicly available as required by law, making  it  available
   32  for  distribution  at the annual [meeting] BUDGET HEARING, and otherwise
   33  disseminating it as required by the commissioner. Such report card shall
   34  include: (i) the amount of total spending and total estimated school tax
   35  levy that would result from adoption of  the  proposed  budget  and  the
   36  percentage  increase  or decrease in total spending and total school tax
   37  levy from the school district budget for the preceding school year;  and
   38  (ii) THE DISTRICT'S TAX LEVY LIMIT AND TAX LEVY BASE DETERMINED PURSUANT
   39  TO  SECTION THIRTEEN HUNDRED SEVEN OF THE REAL PROPERTY TAX LAW, THE TAX
   40  LEVY PROPOSED BY THE DISTRICT, AND THE PROPOSED  CAPITAL  TAX  LEVY,  IF
   41  ANY;  AND  (III) the projected enrollment growth for the school year for
   42  which the budget is prepared, and the percentage  change  in  enrollment
   43  from  the previous year; and [(iii)] (IV) the percentage increase in the
   44  consumer price index, as defined in paragraph c of this subdivision; and
   45  [(iv)] (V) the projected amount of the  unappropriated  unreserved  fund
   46  balance  that  will  be  retained if the proposed budget is adopted, the
   47  projected amount of the reserved fund balance, the projected  amount  of
   48  the  appropriated  fund  balance,  the percentage of the proposed budget
   49  that the unappropriated unreserved fund balance represents,  the  actual
   50  unappropriated  unreserved  fund balance retained in the school district
   51  budget for the preceding school year, and the percentage of  the  school
   52  district  budget  for the preceding school year that the actual unappro-
   53  priated unreserved fund balance represents.
   54    b. A copy of the property tax report  card  prepared  for  the  annual
   55  [district  meeting]  BUDGET HEARING shall be submitted to the department
   56  in the manner prescribed by the department by the end  of  the  business
       S. 5                               14                               A. 5
    1  day  next  following  approval of the report card by the board of educa-
    2  tion, but no later than twenty-four days prior to the statewide  uniform
    3  voting  day.    The  department  shall  compile such data for all school
    4  districts  [whose budgets are subject to a vote of the qualified voters]
    5  SUBJECT TO A TAX LEVY LIMITATION PURSUANT TO  SECTION  THIRTEEN  HUNDRED
    6  SEVEN  OF  THE  REAL  PROPERTY  TAX  LAW and shall make such compilation
    7  available electronically at  least  ten  days  prior  to  the  statewide
    8  uniform voting day.
    9    c.  For  purposes  of  this  subdivision,  "percentage increase in the
   10  consumer price index" shall mean  the  percentage  that  represents  the
   11  product  of  one  hundred  and  the  quotient of: (i) the average of the
   12  national consumer price indexes determined by the United States  depart-
   13  ment of labor for the twelve-month period preceding January first of the
   14  current  year  minus  the average of the national consumer price indexes
   15  determined by the United States department of labor for the twelve-month
   16  period preceding January first of the prior year, divided  by  (ii)  the
   17  average  of the national consumer price indexes determined by the United
   18  States department of labor for the twelve-month period preceding January
   19  first of the prior year, with the result expressed as a decimal  to  two
   20  places.
   21    S  8.  Section 1718 of the education law, as amended by chapter 774 of
   22  the laws of 1965, subdivision 2 as amended by chapter 82 of the laws  of
   23  1995, is amended to read as follows:
   24    S 1718. Limitation  upon expenditures.  1. No board of education shall
   25  incur a district liability in excess of the amount  appropriated  [by  a
   26  district  meeting]  IN  THE  BUDGET  APPROVED  BY THE BOARD OF EDUCATION
   27  unless such board is specially authorized by law to incur  such  liabil-
   28  ity.
   29    2.  Notwithstanding the provisions of subdivision one of this section,
   30  grants in aid received  from  the  state  and  federal  governments  for
   31  specific  purposes,  other state AID OR grants in aid [identified by the
   32  commissioner] for general use [as specified by the board of  education],
   33  other  gifts  which  are  required to be spent for particular objects or
   34  purposes and insurance proceeds received for the loss, theft, damage  or
   35  destruction  of  real  or personal property, when proposed to be used or
   36  applied to repair or replace  such  property,  may  be  appropriated  by
   37  resolution  of  the  board  of education at any time for such objects or
   38  purposes.
   39    S 9. Section 2005 of the education law, as amended  by  section  3  of
   40  part M of chapter 57 of the laws of 2005, is amended to read as follows:
   41    S 2005. Special  meeting to transact business of annual meeting. When-
   42  ever the time for holding the annual meeting in a school district  shall
   43  pass  without such meeting being held, a special meeting[, to be held on
   44  the date specified for a school budget revote  pursuant  to  subdivision
   45  three  of  section two thousand seven of this part,] shall thereafter be
   46  called by the trustees or by the clerk of such district for the  purpose
   47  of  transacting the business of the annual meeting; and if no such meet-
   48  ing be called by the trustees or the clerk within ten  days  after  such
   49  time  shall  have passed, the district superintendent of the supervisory
   50  district in which said school district is situated or  the  commissioner
   51  [of  education] may order any inhabitant of such district to give notice
   52  of such meeting in the manner provided in section two  thousand  one  of
   53  this  part,  and the officers of the district shall make to such meeting
   54  the reports required to be made at the annual meeting,  subject  to  the
   55  same  penalty in case of neglect; and the officers elected at such meet-
   56  ing shall hold their respective offices only until the next annual meet-
       S. 5                               15                               A. 5
    1  ing and until their successors are elected  and  shall  have  qualified.
    2  Notice  of  such  annual  meeting  shall comply with the requirements of
    3  section two thousand three or section two thousand four of this part  by
    4  publishing  such  notices  once  in  each week within the two weeks next
    5  preceding such special meeting, the first publication  to  be  at  least
    6  fourteen  days  before such meeting and any required posting to be four-
    7  teen days before the time of such meeting. [If the qualified  voters  at
    8  such  special  district  meeting  defeat the school district budget, the
    9  trustees or board of education shall adopt a contingency budget pursuant
   10  to section two thousand twenty-three of this part.  Notwithstanding  any
   11  other provision in law, the trustees or board of education following the
   12  adoption of a contingency budget may call a special district meeting for
   13  a  second  vote  on  the proposed budget pursuant to the requirements of
   14  subdivision three of section two thousand seven or subdivision three  of
   15  section two thousand six of this chapter.]
   16    S 10. Subdivision 3 of section 2006 of the education law is REPEALED.
   17    S  11.  Subdivision 3 of section 2007 of the education law, as amended
   18  by section 5 of part M of chapter 57 of the laws of 2005, is amended  to
   19  read as follows:
   20    3.  a.  Notwithstanding  the provisions of subdivisions one and two of
   21  this section, and of section two thousand four of  this  part,  whenever
   22  the  [voters  of  the  district  shall  have  defeated the budget of the
   23  district, in whole or in part, or whenever the] board of education shall
   24  have rejected all bids for a contract  or  contracts  for  public  work,
   25  transportation  or  purchase[,]  and  [whenever  in either such case the
   26  board of education shall deem] DEEMS it necessary and proper to  call  a
   27  special meeting to take appropriate action, the board of education shall
   28  be authorized to give the notices required by subdivision one of section
   29  two  thousand  four of this part by publishing such notices once in each
   30  week within the two weeks next preceding such special meeting, the first
   31  publication to be at least fourteen days before  such  meeting  and  any
   32  required posting to be fourteen days before the time of such meeting.
   33    b.  [A  school  budget  revote  called pursuant to paragraph a of this
   34  subdivision shall be held on the third Tuesday of June, provided, howev-
   35  er that such budget revote shall be held on the second Tuesday  in  June
   36  if  the commissioner at the request of a local school board certifies no
   37  later than March first that such  vote  would  conflict  with  religious
   38  observances.
   39    c.] Notwithstanding the provisions of section two thousand fourteen of
   40  this part, where a school district shall have adopted personal registra-
   41  tion,  the board of registration shall meet on such day or days as shall
   42  be fixed by the board of education, the  last  day  of  which,  however,
   43  shall not be more than seven nor less than two days preceding any school
   44  district  meeting notices for which shall have been given as provided in
   45  this subdivision.
   46    S 12. Section 2008 of the education law is amended  by  adding  a  new
   47  subdivision 3 to read as follows:
   48    3.  NOTWITHSTANDING  ANY  OTHER  PROVISION  OF LAW TO THE CONTRARY, IT
   49  SHALL NOT BE WITHIN THE POWERS OF THE VOTERS OF  A  SCHOOL  DISTRICT  TO
   50  SUBMIT  A  PROPOSITION  THAT REQUIRES THE EXPENDITURE OF MONEY, PROVIDED
   51  THAT THE VOTERS MAY SUBMIT A TAX LEVY  LIMIT  UNDERRIDE  PROPOSITION  AS
   52  AUTHORIZED   PURSUANT   TO  SUBDIVISION  TWO  OF  SECTION  TWO  THOUSAND
   53  TWENTY-THREE-A OF THIS PART OR A PROPOSITION TO CHANGE THE MILEAGE LIMI-
   54  TATIONS ON TRANSPORTATION PURSUANT TO SUBDIVISION  NINETEEN  OF  SECTION
   55  TWO THOUSAND TWENTY-ONE OF THIS PART.
       S. 5                               16                               A. 5
    1    S  13.  Subdivisions  10, 11, 12, 15, 16, 17, 18, 20 and 21 of section
    2  2021 of the education law, such section as renumbered by chapter 801  of
    3  the  laws of 1953, are REPEALED and subdivisions 8 and 19 are amended to
    4  read as follows:
    5    8.  To  vote  a  tax  upon  the  taxable  property of the district, to
    6  purchase, lease and improve such sites or an addition to such sites  and
    7  grounds  for the purposes specified in [the preceding] subdivision SEVEN
    8  OF THIS SECTION, to hire or purchase rooms or buildings for school rooms
    9  or schoolhouses, or to  build  schoolhouses[;  to  keep  in  repair  and
   10  furnish  the  same with necessary fuel, furniture and appurtenances, and
   11  to purchase such implements, apparatus and supplies as may be  necessary
   12  to  provide  instruction  in agriculture and other subjects, and for the
   13  organization and conduct of athletic, playground and other social center
   14  work].
   15    19. To [provide, by tax or otherwise, for the conveyance of] DETERMINE
   16  WHETHER TRANSPORTATION SHOULD BE PROVIDED PURSUANT  TO  PARAGRAPH  A  OF
   17  SUBDIVISION  ONE OF SECTION THIRTY-SIX HUNDRED THIRTY-FIVE OF THIS CHAP-
   18  TER TO pupils residing in [a] THE school  district  WHO  ARE  IN  GRADES
   19  KINDERGARTEN  THROUGH EIGHT AND LIVE LESS THAN TWO MILES FROM THE SCHOOL
   20  THEY LEGALLY ATTEND OR ARE IN GRADES NINE THROUGH TWELVE AND  LIVE  LESS
   21  THAN  THREE  MILES  FROM  SUCH SCHOOL OR TO PUPILS IN ANY GRADE WHO LIVE
   22  MORE THAN FIFTEEN MILES FROM THE SCHOOL THEY LEGALLY ATTEND, (a) to  the
   23  elementary  or high schools, or both, maintained in such district and/or
   24  (b) to the elementary or high schools, or both, in any city or  district
   25  with which an education contract shall have been made, and/or (c) to the
   26  elementary  or high schools, or both, other than public, situated within
   27  the district or an adjacent district or  city,  whenever  such  district
   28  shall  have  contracted with the school authorities of any city, or with
   29  another school district, for the education therein of the pupils  resid-
   30  ing  in  such school district, or whenever in any school district pupils
   31  of school age shall reside so remote from the schoolhouse therein or the
   32  elementary or high school they legally attend,  within  or  without  the
   33  district, that they are practically deprived of school advantages during
   34  any portion of the school year.
   35    S  14.  Section 2022 of the education law, as amended by section 23 of
   36  part A of chapter 436 of the laws of  1997,  subdivisions  1  and  3  as
   37  amended by section 8 of part C of chapter 58 of the laws of 1998, subdi-
   38  vision  2-a  as amended by section 3 of part A of chapter 60 of the laws
   39  of 2000, paragraph b of subdivision 2-a as amended by section 5 of  part
   40  W of chapter 57 of the laws of 2008, subdivision 4 as amended by section
   41  7 of part M of chapter 57 of the laws of 2005 and subdivision 6 as added
   42  by chapter 61 of the laws of 2003, is amended to read as follows:
   43    S  2022.  [Vote  on] ADOPTION OF school district budgets [and on the];
   44  ANNUAL DISTRICT MEETING AND election of  school  district  trustees  and
   45  board  of  education  members. 1. Notwithstanding any law, rule or regu-
   46  lation to the contrary, the ANNUAL  DISTRICT  MEETING  AND  election  of
   47  trustees or members of the board of education, and the TAX LEVY PROPOSI-
   48  TION  vote  [upon  the  appropriation of the necessary funds to meet the
   49  estimated expenditures,] in  any  common  school  district,  union  free
   50  school district, central school district or central high school district
   51  shall  be held [at the annual meeting and election] on the third Tuesday
   52  in May, provided, however, that such  election  shall  be  held  on  the
   53  second  Tuesday  in  May  if  the commissioner at the request of a local
   54  school board certifies no later than  March  first  that  such  election
   55  would  conflict  with religious observances. [When such election or vote
   56  is taken by recording the ayes and noes of the qualified voters  attend-
       S. 5                               17                               A. 5
    1  ing, a majority of the qualified voters present and voting, by a hand or
    2  voice  vote,  may determine to take up the question of voting the neces-
    3  sary funds to meet the estimated expenditures for a specific item  sepa-
    4  rately,  and  the  qualified  voters present and voting may increase the
    5  amount of any estimated expenditures or  reduce  the  same,  except  for
    6  teachers'   salaries,  and  the  ordinary  contingent  expenses  of  the
    7  schools.] The sole trustee, board of trustees or board of  education  of
    8  every  common,  union  free, central or central high school district and
    9  every city school district to which this article applies  shall  hold  a
   10  budget  hearing not less than seven nor more than fourteen days prior to
   11  the annual meeting and election [or special district meeting at which  a
   12  school  budget  vote  will  occur], and shall prepare and present to the
   13  voters at such budget hearing a proposed school district budget for  the
   14  ensuing  school year.   IF THE QUALIFIED VOTERS HAVE APPROVED A TAX LEVY
   15  PROPOSITION OR UNDERRIDE PROPOSITION  IN  ACCORDANCE  WITH  SECTION  TWO
   16  THOUSAND  TWENTY-THREE-A  OF THIS PART, SUCH TRUSTEES OR BOARD OF EDUCA-
   17  TION SHALL ADOPT A BUDGET THAT COMPLIES WITH SUCH PROPOSITION.    IF  NO
   18  TAX  LEVY  PROPOSITION OR UNDERRIDE PROPOSITION HAS BEEN APPROVED BY THE
   19  QUALIFIED VOTERS, THEN THE TRUSTEES OR BOARD OF EDUCATION SHALL ADOPT  A
   20  BUDGET THAT REQUIRES A TAX LEVY, EXCLUDING ANY CAPITAL TAX LEVY, THAT IS
   21  NO  GREATER  THAN THE TAX LEVY BASE DETERMINED PURSUANT TO SECTION THIR-
   22  TEEN HUNDRED SEVEN OF THE REAL PROPERTY TAX LAW.
   23    2. [Except as provided in subdivision four of this  section,  nothing]
   24  NOTHING  in  this section shall preclude the trustees or board of educa-
   25  tion, in their discretion, from submitting additional items of  expendi-
   26  ture  to  the voters for approval as separate propositions or the voters
   27  from submitting propositions pursuant to [section] SECTIONS two thousand
   28  eight and two thousand thirty-five of this [article] PART.
   29    2-a. Every common, union free, central, central high  school  district
   30  and  city  school  district  to  which this article applies shall mail a
   31  school budget notice to all qualified  voters  of  the  school  district
   32  after  the  date of the budget hearing, but no later than six days prior
   33  to the annual meeting and election [or special district meeting at which
   34  a school budget vote will occur]. The school budget notice shall compare
   35  the percentage increase or decrease in total spending under the proposed
   36  budget over total spending under the school district budget adopted  for
   37  the current school year, with the percentage increase or decrease in the
   38  consumer  price  index,  from  January first of the prior school year to
   39  January first of the current school year, and shall  also  include  [the
   40  information  required  by  paragraphs  a  and b of this subdivision. The
   41  notice shall also set forth the date, time and place of the school budg-
   42  et vote, in the same manner as in the  notice  of  annual  meeting]  THE
   43  DISTRICT'S  TAX  LEVY  LIMIT  AND  TAX  LEVY BASE DETERMINED PURSUANT TO
   44  SECTION THIRTEEN HUNDRED SEVEN OF THE REAL PROPERTY  TAX  LAW,  THE  TAX
   45  LEVY PROPOSED BY THE DISTRICT AND THE PROPOSED CAPITAL TAX LEVY, IF ANY.
   46  Such notice shall be in a form prescribed by the commissioner.
   47    [a.  Commencing with the proposed budget for the two thousand one--two
   48  thousand two school year, such notice shall also include  a  description
   49  of how total spending and the tax levy resulting from the proposed budg-
   50  et would compare with a projected contingency budget adopted pursuant to
   51  section  two  thousand  twenty-three of this article, assuming that such
   52  contingency budget is adopted on  the  same  day  as  the  vote  on  the
   53  proposed  budget.  Such  comparison  shall  be in total and by component
   54  (program, capital and administrative), and shall include a statement  of
   55  the assumptions made in estimating the projected contingency budget.
       S. 5                               18                               A. 5
    1    b.]  Commencing  with the proposed budget for the two thousand eight--
    2  two thousand nine school year, such notice  shall  also  include,  in  a
    3  format  prescribed  by  the commissioner, an estimate of the tax savings
    4  that would be available to an eligible homeowner under the basic  school
    5  tax  relief  (STAR) exemption authorized by section four hundred twenty-
    6  five of the real property tax law if the proposed budget  were  adopted.
    7  Such  estimate shall be made in the manner prescribed by the commission-
    8  er, in consultation with the office of real property services.
    9    3. In all elections for trustees or members of boards of education  or
   10  votes ON PROPOSITIONS involving the expenditure of money, or authorizing
   11  the  levy  of  taxes,  OR  VOTES ON PROPOSITIONS TO UNDERRIDE A TAX LEVY
   12  LIMITATION PURSUANT TO SECTION TWO THOUSAND TWENTY-THREE-A OF THIS PART,
   13  the vote thereon shall be by ballot, or, in school districts that  prior
   14  to  nineteen  hundred  ninety-eight  conducted  their vote at the annual
   15  meeting, may be ascertained by taking and recording the ayes and noes of
   16  such qualified voters attending and voting at such district meetings.
   17    4. [In the event that the original proposed budget is not approved  by
   18  the voters, the sole trustee, trustees or board of education may adopt a
   19  final budget pursuant to subdivision five of this section or resubmit to
   20  the  voters  the  original  or  a revised budget pursuant to subdivision
   21  three of section two thousand seven of this part.  Upon  one  defeat  of
   22  such  resubmitted  budget, the sole trustee, trustees or board of educa-
   23  tion shall adopt a final budget pursuant to  subdivision  five  of  this
   24  section.]  Notwithstanding  any  other provision of law to the contrary,
   25  [the school district budget for any school year, or  any  part  of  such
   26  budget  or] any propositions involving the expenditure of money for such
   27  school year shall not be submitted for a vote of  the  qualified  voters
   28  more than twice.
   29    [5.  If  the  qualified  voters  fail  to  approve the proposed school
   30  district budget upon resubmission or upon a determination not to  resub-
   31  mit  for a second vote pursuant to subdivision four of this section, the
   32  sole trustee, trustees or board of education, after applying thereto the
   33  public school moneys and other moneys received or  to  be  received  for
   34  that purpose, shall levy a tax for the sum necessary for teachers' sala-
   35  ries  and  other  ordinary  contingent  expenses  in accordance with the
   36  provisions of this subdivision and section two thousand twenty-three  of
   37  this article.
   38    6. Notwithstanding the provisions of subdivision four of section eigh-
   39  teen  hundred  four and subdivision five of section nineteen hundred six
   40  of this title, subdivision one of section two thousand two of this arti-
   41  cle, subdivision one of this section, subdivision two of  section  twen-
   42  ty-six hundred one-a of this title and any other provision of law to the
   43  contrary,  the  annual  district  meeting  and election of every common,
   44  union free, central and central high  school  district  and  the  annual
   45  meeting  of  every city school district in a city having a population of
   46  less than one hundred twenty-five thousand inhabitants that is scheduled
   47  to be held on the third Tuesday of May, two  thousand  three  is  hereby
   48  adjourned until the first Tuesday in June, two thousand three. The trus-
   49  tees  or  board  of education of each such school district shall provide
   50  notice of such adjourned meeting to the qualified voters in  the  manner
   51  prescribed  for  notice  of  the  annual  meeting, and such notice shall
   52  provide for an adjourned budget hearing. The adjourned district  meeting
   53  or  district  meeting and election shall be deemed the annual meeting or
   54  annual meeting and election of the district for all purposes under  this
   55  title  and  the date of the adjourned meeting shall be deemed the state-
   56  wide uniform voting day for all purposes under  this  title.    Notwith-
       S. 5                               19                               A. 5
    1  standing  the provisions of subdivision seven of section sixteen hundred
    2  eight or subdivision seven of section seventeen hundred sixteen of  this
    3  title or any other provision of law, rule or regulation to the contrary,
    4  in two thousand three the property tax report card shall be submitted to
    5  the  department  no  later  than  twenty  days  prior to the date of the
    6  adjourned meeting and the department shall make its  compilation  avail-
    7  able electronically at least seven days prior to such date.]
    8    S 15. Section 2023 of the education law is REPEALED.
    9    S  16.  Subdivision 2 of section 2035 of the education law, as amended
   10  by chapter 111 of the laws of 1979, is amended to read as follows:
   11    2. In common school districts the  manner  of  making  nominations  or
   12  submitting  propositions  by anyone other than the trustees and in union
   13  free school districts the manner of submitting  propositions  by  anyone
   14  other  than  the board of education for the purpose of preparing ballots
   15  for the machine shall be prescribed by a rule previously adopted by  the
   16  trustees  or  board  of education; provided, however, that the petition,
   17  certificate, declaration, notice or other paper required by  such  rule,
   18  for  the  making  of  any  such nomination or submission, except as to a
   19  question or proposition required by law to be stated in the published or
   20  posted notice of the meeting shall be filed with the trustees  or  board
   21  of  education not later than thirty days before the meeting or election.
   22  Any nomination may be rejected by the trustees if the candidate is inel-
   23  igible for the office or has declared his unwillingness  to  serve;  any
   24  proposition may be rejected by the trustees or board of education if the
   25  purpose  of  the  proposition  is not within the power of the voters, or
   26  where A PROPOSITION TO CHANGE THE MILEAGE LIMITATIONS ON  TRANSPORTATION
   27  PURSUANT  TO  SUBDIVISION NINETEEN OF SECTION TWO THOUSAND TWENTY-ONE OF
   28  THIS PART  WOULD  REQUIRE  the  expenditure  of  ADDITIONAL  moneys  [is
   29  required  by  the  proposition], if the proposition fails to include the
   30  necessary specific appropriation.   Any such rule may  be  amended  from
   31  time  to  time  and may state that a reasonable minimum number of signa-
   32  tures shall be required for submission.  The trustees or board of educa-
   33  tion shall cause such rule, and amendments from  time  to  time,  to  be
   34  printed  for  general  distribution  in the district. Provided, however,
   35  that the provisions of any  special  law  relating  to  nominations  and
   36  elections  in any union free school district shall continue to remain in
   37  force, and the manner of making nominations and the conduct of  meetings
   38  and elections, shall conform to such special law.
   39    S  17. Paragraph a of subdivision 9 and paragraphs a and b of subdivi-
   40  sion 12 of section 2503 of the education law, as amended by chapter  171
   41  of the laws of 1996, are amended to read as follows:
   42    a.  Shall  promote  the best interests of the schools and other activ-
   43  ities committed to its care, and shall authorize, or in  its  discretion
   44  conduct,  and  maintain  such  extra classroom activities, including the
   45  operation of cafeterias or restaurant service  for  use  by  pupils  and
   46  teachers,  as  the  board,  from  time to time, shall deem proper.  Such
   47  cafeterias or restaurant service may be used by the community for school
   48  related functions and activities and to furnish  meals  to  the  elderly
   49  residents,  sixty  years of age or older, of the district. Such utiliza-
   50  tion AND THE OPERATION OF CAFETERIAS  OR  RESTAURANT  SERVICE  shall  be
   51  subject to the approval of the board of education[, and shall be subject
   52  to  voter  approval unless the cafeteria or restaurant service was oper-
   53  ated during the preceding school year and requires no tax levy]. Charges
   54  shall be sufficient to meet the direct cost  of  preparing  and  serving
   55  such meals, reducible by available reimbursements.
       S. 5                               20                               A. 5
    1    a.    to  and  from  schools  within the school district for distances
    2  greater than two or three miles, as applicable, and to and from  schools
    3  outside  the district within the mileage limitations prescribed in para-
    4  graph a of subdivision one of section thirty-six hundred thirty-five  of
    5  this  chapter  shall always be [an ordinary contingent expense] A CHARGE
    6  UPON THE SCHOOL DISTRICT, and
    7    b. for distances less than two or three miles, as applicable,  or  for
    8  greater  than  fifteen  miles  to  and from schools outside the district
    9  shall be [an ordinary contingent  expense]  A  CHARGE  UPON  THE  SCHOOL
   10  DISTRICT  if:  (i) such transportation was provided during the preceding
   11  school year and the qualified voters have not passed a special  proposi-
   12  tion  constricting  the  mileage limitations for the current school year
   13  from those in effect in the prior year, or  (ii)  the  qualified  voters
   14  have  passed  a special proposition expanding the mileage limitations in
   15  effect in the prior year.
   16    S 18. Section 2601-a of the education law, as added by chapter 171  of
   17  the  laws  of  1996,  subdivision 2 as amended by section 6 of part M of
   18  chapter 57 of the laws of 2005, subdivision 3 as amended by chapter  640
   19  of  the laws of 2008, subdivision 4 as amended by section 8 of part M of
   20  chapter 57 of the laws of 2005, subdivision 5 as amended by  section  29
   21  of  part  A of chapter 436 of the laws of 1997, subdivision 6 as amended
   22  and subdivision 7 as added by chapter  474  of  the  laws  of  1996,  is
   23  amended to read as follows:
   24    S  2601-a.  Procedures  for  [adoption  of  school budgets] ANNUAL AND
   25  SPECIAL DISTRICT MEETINGS in small city school districts. 1.  The  board
   26  of education of each city school district subject to this article [shall
   27  provide for the submission of a budget for approval of the voters pursu-
   28  ant to the provisions of this section.
   29    2.  The  board  of education] shall ADOPT A SCHOOL DISTRICT BUDGET AND
   30  conduct all annual and special school district meetings for the  purpose
   31  of  [adopting  a  school district budget] VOTING ON PROPOSITIONS FOR THE
   32  EXPENDITURE OF MONEY, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED  TO  VOTES  PURSUANT  TO
   33  SECTION  FOUR  HUNDRED  SIXTEEN  OF THIS CHAPTER, AND VOTING ON TAX LEVY
   34  PROPOSITIONS AND UNDERRIDE PROPOSITIONS PURSUANT TO SECTION TWO THOUSAND
   35  TWENTY-THREE-A OF THIS TITLE, in the same manner as a union free  school
   36  district  in accordance with the provisions of article forty-one of this
   37  title, except as otherwise provided by this section. The annual  meeting
   38  and  election  of  each  such  city school district shall be held on the
   39  third Tuesday of May in each year, provided, however  that  such  annual
   40  meeting  and  election shall be held on the second Tuesday in May if the
   41  commissioner at the request of a local school board certifies  no  later
   42  than March first that such election would conflict with religious obser-
   43  vances[,  and  any school budget revote shall be held on the date and in
   44  the same manner specified in subdivision three of section  two  thousand
   45  seven of this title]. The provisions of this article, and where applica-
   46  ble  subdivisions  nine and nine-a of section twenty-five hundred two of
   47  this title, governing the qualification and registration of voters,  and
   48  procedures  for  the  nomination and election of members of the board of
   49  education shall continue to apply, and shall  govern  the  qualification
   50  and  registration  of  voters  and voting procedures with respect to the
   51  adoption of a school district budget.
   52    [3.] 2. The  board  of  education  shall  prepare  a  proposed  school
   53  district  budget  for the ensuing year in accordance with the provisions
   54  of section seventeen hundred sixteen  of  this  chapter,  including  all
   55  provisions  relating to required notices and appendices to the statement
   56  of expenditures. No board of education shall  incur  a  school  district
       S. 5                               21                               A. 5
    1  liability  except  as  authorized by the provisions of section seventeen
    2  hundred  eighteen  of  this  chapter.  Such  proposed  budget  shall  be
    3  presented  in three components: a program component, a capital component
    4  and  an administrative component which shall be separately delineated in
    5  accordance with regulations of the commissioner after consultation  with
    6  local  school  district  officials.  The  administrative component shall
    7  include, but need not be limited to, office and  central  administrative
    8  expenses, traveling expenses and all compensation, salaries and benefits
    9  of  all school administrators and supervisors, including business admin-
   10  istrators, superintendents of schools and deputy,  assistant,  associate
   11  or  other  superintendents  under  all  existing employment contracts or
   12  collective bargaining agreements, any and  all  expenditures  associated
   13  with  the  operation of the board of education, the office of the super-
   14  intendent  of  schools,  general  administration,  the  school  business
   15  office, consulting costs not directly related to direct student services
   16  and  programs,  planning  and  all other administrative activities.  The
   17  program component shall include, but need not be limited to, all program
   18  expenditures of the school district, including the salaries and benefits
   19  of teachers and any school administrators or  supervisors  who  spend  a
   20  majority  of  their time performing teaching duties, and all transporta-
   21  tion operating expenses. The capital component shall include,  but  need
   22  not  be  limited to, all transportation capital, debt service, and lease
   23  expenditures;  costs  resulting  from  judgments   in   tax   certiorari
   24  proceedings  or  the payment of awards from court judgments, administra-
   25  tive orders or settled or compromised claims; and all  facilities  costs
   26  of  the  school  district,  including facilities lease expenditures, the
   27  annual debt service and total debt for all facilities financed by  bonds
   28  and  notes of the school district, and the costs of construction, acqui-
   29  sition, reconstruction, rehabilitation or improvement of  school  build-
   30  ings,  provided  that such budget shall include a rental, operations and
   31  maintenance section that includes base rent  costs,  total  rent  costs,
   32  operation and maintenance charges, cost per square foot for each facili-
   33  ty  leased  by the school district, and any and all expenditures associ-
   34  ated with custodial salaries and benefits, service contracts,  supplies,
   35  utilities,  and  maintenance  and repairs of school facilities. [For the
   36  purposes of the development of a budget for the nineteen  hundred  nine-
   37  ty-seven--ninety-eight  school  year, the board of education shall sepa-
   38  rate its program, capital and  administrative  costs  for  the  nineteen
   39  hundred  ninety-six--ninety-seven  school  year  in the manner as if the
   40  budget for such year had been presented in three components.] Except  as
   41  provided  in  subdivision  [four] THREE of this section, nothing in this
   42  section shall preclude the board, in  its  discretion,  from  submitting
   43  additional  items  of expenditure to the voters for approval as separate
   44  propositions or the voters from submitting  propositions  [pursuant]  to
   45  THE  EXTENT  AUTHORIZED  BY sections two thousand eight and two thousand
   46  thirty-five of this chapter.
   47    [4. In the event the qualified voters of the district reject the budg-
   48  et proposed pursuant to subdivision three of this section, the board may
   49  propose to the voters a revised budget pursuant to subdivision three  of
   50  section  two  thousand  seven  of  this title or may adopt a contingency
   51  budget pursuant to subdivision five of this section and subdivision five
   52  of section two thousand  twenty-two  of  this  title.]  3.  The  [school
   53  district  budget  for  any  school  year, or any part of such budget or]
   54  BOARD OF EDUCATION SHALL  NOT  SUBMIT  any  propositions  involving  the
   55  expenditure of money for such school year [shall not be submitted] for a
   56  vote  of  the qualified voters more than twice. [In the event the quali-
       S. 5                               22                               A. 5
    1  fied voters reject the resubmitted  budget,  the  board  shall  adopt  a
    2  contingency  budget  in accordance with subdivision five of this section
    3  and subdivision five of such section two  thousand  twenty-two  of  this
    4  title.
    5    5. If the qualified voters fail or refuse to vote the sum estimated to
    6  be  necessary  for  teachers'  salaries  and  other  ordinary contingent
    7  expenses, the board shall adopt a contingency budget in accordance  with
    8  this  subdivision  and  shall  levy  a  tax for that portion of such sum
    9  remaining after applying thereto the moneys received or to  be  received
   10  from state, federal or other sources, in the same manner as if the budg-
   11  et had been approved by the qualified voters; subject to the limitations
   12  imposed in subdivision four of section two thousand twenty-three of this
   13  chapter  and  this  subdivision.  The administrative component shall not
   14  comprise a greater percentage of the contingency budget exclusive of the
   15  capital component than the lesser of (1) the percentage the  administra-
   16  tive  component  had comprised in the prior year budget exclusive of the
   17  capital component; or (2) the percentage  the  administrative  component
   18  had  comprised  in  the  last  proposed defeated budget exclusive of the
   19  capital component. Such contingency budget shall include the sum  deter-
   20  mined by the board to be necessary for:
   21    (a)  teachers'  salaries, including the salaries of all members of the
   22  teaching and supervising staff;
   23    (b) items of expense specifically authorized by statute to be incurred
   24  by the board of education, including, but not limited  to,  expenditures
   25  for transportation to and from regular school programs included as ordi-
   26  nary  contingent  expenses  in subdivision twelve of section twenty-five
   27  hundred three of this  chapter,  expenditures  for  textbooks,  required
   28  services for non-public school students, school health services, special
   29  education  services,  kindergarten  and nursery school programs, and the
   30  district's share of the  administrative  costs  and  costs  of  services
   31  provided by a board of cooperative educational services;
   32    (c) items of expense for legal obligations of the district, including,
   33  but  not limited to, contractual obligations, debt service, court orders
   34  or judgments, orders of administrative bodies or officers, and standards
   35  and requirements of the board of regents and the commissioner that  have
   36  the force and effect of law;
   37    (d)  the  purchase  of library books and other instructional materials
   38  associated with a library;
   39    (e) items of expense necessary to maintain the educational programs of
   40  the district, preserve the property  of  the  district  or  protect  the
   41  health  and safety of students and staff, including, but not limited to,
   42  support services, pupil personnel services, the necessary  salaries  for
   43  the   necessary   number  of  non-teaching  employees,  necessary  legal
   44  expenses, water and utility charges, instructional supplies  for  teach-
   45  ers'  use,  emergency  repairs,  temporary rental of essential classroom
   46  facilities, and expenditures necessary to advise school district  voters
   47  concerning school matters; and
   48    (f) expenses incurred for interschool athletics, field trips and other
   49  extracurricular activities; and
   50    (g)  any other item of expense determined by the commissioner to be an
   51  ordinary contingent expense in any school district.
   52    6. The commissioner shall determine appeals raising  questions  as  to
   53  what  items  of expenditure are ordinary contingent expenses pursuant to
   54  subdivision five of this section in accordance with section two thousand
   55  twenty-four and three hundred ten of this chapter.
       S. 5                               23                               A. 5
    1    7.] Each year, the board of education shall prepare a school  district
    2  report card, pursuant to regulations of the commissioner, and shall make
    3  it  publicly available by transmitting it to local newspapers of general
    4  circulation, appending it to copies of the proposed budget made publicly
    5  available  as  required  by law, making it available for distribution at
    6  the annual meeting, and otherwise disseminating it as  required  by  the
    7  commissioner.  Such  report  card shall include measures of the academic
    8  performance of the school district, on a school  by  school  basis,  and
    9  measures of the fiscal performance of the district, as prescribed by the
   10  commissioner.  Pursuant  to  regulations of the commissioner, the report
   11  card shall also compare these measures to  statewide  averages  for  all
   12  public  schools, and statewide averages for public schools of comparable
   13  wealth and need, developed by the commissioner. Such report  card  shall
   14  include,  at a minimum, any information on the school district regarding
   15  pupil performance and expenditure per pupil required to be  included  in
   16  the  annual  report  by  the regents to the governor and the legislature
   17  pursuant to section two hundred fifteen-a of this chapter; and any other
   18  information required by the commissioner. School districts  (i)  identi-
   19  fied  as  having  fifteen  percent  or more of their students in special
   20  education, or (ii) which have fifty percent or more  of  their  students
   21  with  disabilities  in  special  education  programs  or  services sixty
   22  percent or more of the school day in a general  education  building,  or
   23  (iii)  which have eight percent or more of their students with disabili-
   24  ties in special education programs in public or private separate  educa-
   25  tional  settings  shall  indicate  on  their school district report card
   26  their respective percentages as defined in this paragraph and paragraphs
   27  (i) and (ii) of this subdivision as compared to the statewide average.
   28    S 19. Paragraph b-1 of subdivision 4 of section 3602 of the  education
   29  law,  as  amended  by  section 13 of part A of chapter 57 of the laws of
   30  2009, is amended to read as follows:
   31    b-1. Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the  contrary,  for
   32  the  two  thousand  seven--two thousand eight through two thousand thir-
   33  teen--two thousand fourteen school years, the additional amount  payable
   34  to each school district pursuant to this subdivision in the current year
   35  as  total foundation aid, after deducting the total foundation aid base,
   36  shall be deemed a state grant in aid identified by the commissioner  for
   37  general  use  for purposes of [sections] SECTION seventeen hundred eigh-
   38  teen [and two thousand twenty-three] of this chapter.
   39    S 20. Subdivision 11 of  section  3602-e  of  the  education  law,  as
   40  amended  by  section  19 of part B of chapter 57 of the laws of 2007, is
   41  amended to read as follows:
   42    11. Notwithstanding the provisions of subdivision ten of this section,
   43  where the district serves fewer children during the current year than in
   44  the base year, the school district shall have its apportionment  reduced
   45  in  an  amount proportional to such deficiency in the current year or in
   46  the succeeding school year, as determined by  the  commissioner,  except
   47  such  reduction  shall  not  apply  to school districts which have fully
   48  implemented a universal pre-kindergarten program by making such  program
   49  available  to  all  eligible  children. [Expenses incurred by the school
   50  district in implementing a pre-kindergarten  program  plan  pursuant  to
   51  this subdivision shall be deemed ordinary contingent expenses.]
   52    S  21.  Paragraphs  a  and  b  of subdivision 1 of section 3635 of the
   53  education law, paragraph a as amended by chapter 69 of the laws of 1992,
   54  paragraph b as amended by chapter 718 of the laws of 1990  and  subpara-
   55  graph  (i) of paragraph b as amended by chapter 571 of the laws of 1994,
   56  are amended to read as follows:
       S. 5                               24                               A. 5
    1    a. Sufficient transportation facilities (including the  operation  and
    2  maintenance  of motor vehicles) shall be provided by the school district
    3  for all the children residing within the school district to and from the
    4  school they legally attend, who  are  in  need  of  such  transportation
    5  because  of  the  remoteness  of  the  school  to  the  child or for the
    6  promotion of the best interest of such children.    Such  transportation
    7  shall be provided for all children attending grades kindergarten through
    8  eight  who  live  more than two miles from the school which they legally
    9  attend and for all children attending grades  nine  through  twelve  who
   10  live more than three miles from the school which they legally attend and
   11  shall be provided for each such child up to a distance of fifteen miles,
   12  the distances in each case being measured by the nearest available route
   13  from  home  to school. The cost of providing such transportation between
   14  two or three miles, as the case may  be,  and  fifteen  miles  shall  be
   15  considered  for  the  purposes  of  this chapter to be a charge upon the
   16  district [and an ordinary contingent expense of the district]. Transpor-
   17  tation for a lesser distance than two miles  in  the  case  of  children
   18  attending  grades  kindergarten through eight or three miles in the case
   19  of children attending grades nine  through  twelve  and  for  a  greater
   20  distance  than  fifteen  miles  may be provided by the district WITH THE
   21  APPROVAL OF THE QUALIFIED VOTERS, and, if  provided,  shall  be  offered
   22  equally  to all children in like circumstances residing in the district;
   23  provided, however, that this requirement shall not apply to  transporta-
   24  tion  offered  pursuant  to  section thirty-six hundred thirty-five-b of
   25  this [article] PART.
   26    b. (i) School districts providing transportation to a nonpublic school
   27  for pupils living within a specified distance  from  such  school  shall
   28  designate  one  or more public schools as centralized pick-up points and
   29  shall provide transportation between  such  points  and  such  nonpublic
   30  schools for students residing in the district who live too far from such
   31  nonpublic schools to qualify for transportation between home and school.
   32  The  district  shall not be responsible for the provision of transporta-
   33  tion for pupils between  their  home  and  such  pick-up  points.    The
   34  district  may  provide school bus transportation to a pupil if the resi-
   35  dence of the pupil is located on an established route for the  transpor-
   36  tation  of  pupils to the centralized pick-up point provided such trans-
   37  portation does not result in additional costs to the district. [The cost
   38  of providing transportation between such pick-up points and such nonpub-
   39  lic schools shall be an ordinary contingent expense.]
   40    (ii) A board of education may, at its discretion, provide  transporta-
   41  tion  for  pupils  residing  within  the  district to a nonpublic school
   42  located more than fifteen miles from the home of any such pupil provided
   43  that such transportation has been  provided  to  such  nonpublic  school
   44  pursuant  to this subdivision in at least one of the immediately preced-
   45  ing three school years and such transportation is provided from  one  or
   46  more  centralized  pick-up  points designated pursuant to this paragraph
   47  and that the distance from such pick-up points to the  nonpublic  school
   48  is  not  more  than fifteen miles. The district shall not be responsible
   49  for the provision of transportation for pupils between [pupils]  PUPILS'
   50  homes  and  such  pick-up  points. [The cost of providing transportation
   51  between such pick-up points and such nonpublic schools shall be an ordi-
   52  nary contingent expense.]
   53    S 22. Subdivision 10 of  section  3635-b  of  the  education  law,  as
   54  amended  by  chapter  422  of  the  laws  of 2004, is amended to read as
   55  follows:
       S. 5                               25                               A. 5
    1    10. The cost of providing transportation, pursuant to  the  provisions
    2  of  this section, shall [be an ordinary contingent expense and shall] be
    3  included as an item of expense for purposes of determining the transpor-
    4  tation quota of such district.
    5    S 23. Subdivisions 1, 3, 3-a, 4 and 5 of section 3651 of the education
    6  law, subdivision 1 as amended by chapter 504 of the laws of 1949, subdi-
    7  visions 3 and 4 as added by chapter 782 of the laws of 1948, subdivision
    8  3-a  as  added  by chapter 588 of the laws of 1988, and subdivision 5 as
    9  amended by chapter 976 of the laws of  1963,  are  amended  to  read  as
   10  follows:
   11    1.  A reserve fund may be established by the school authorities of any
   12  school district, [provided, however, that no such fund shall  be  estab-
   13  lished  (a) until approved by a majority vote of the qualified voters of
   14  the district voting on a proposition therefor submitted at a regular  or
   15  special  school  district  meeting,  or in school districts which do not
   16  have such meetings, at an election called  for  such  purpose,  and  (b)
   17  unless  the  notice of such meeting or election shall have stated that a
   18  proposition to establish a reserve  fund  would  be  so  submitted,  the
   19  purpose  of the fund, the ultimate amount thereof, its probable term and
   20  the source from which the funds would be obtained] AS DEFINED IN  SUBDI-
   21  VISION  TWELVE OF SECTION TWO OF THIS CHAPTER.  Such reserve fund may be
   22  established for financing, in whole or in part, the cost of  any  object
   23  or  purpose  for  which  bonds  may  be issued by, or for the objects or
   24  purposes of, the school district pursuant to the local finance law.  The
   25  [proposition]  RESOLUTION  OF  THE  SCHOOL  AUTHORITIES ESTABLISHING THE
   26  RESERVE FUND shall specify the purpose for  which  the  fund  is  estab-
   27  lished, the ultimate amount, the probable term and the source from which
   28  the  funds are to be obtained. There shall be paid into any such fund an
   29  annual amount sufficient to meet the requirements of the proposition  OR
   30  RESOLUTION.   In addition, the [voters] SCHOOL AUTHORITIES may from time
   31  to time direct the [school authorities to pay] PAYMENT into such fund OF
   32  moneys derived from any other source.
   33    3. An expenditure shall be made from a reserve fund only  by  authori-
   34  zation  of  the [voters] SCHOOL AUTHORITIES and for the specific purpose
   35  specified in the proposition OR RESOLUTION WHICH ESTABLISHED THE RESERVE
   36  FUND.
   37    [3-a. Notwithstanding the provisions  of  subdivision  three  of  this
   38  section, any school district which establishes a reserve fund in accord-
   39  ance  with  subdivision one-a of this section may make expenditures from
   40  such fund for the purposes specified in such subdivision without author-
   41  ization of the voters.]
   42    4. The [voters] SCHOOL AUTHORITIES may authorize the transfer  of  all
   43  or  any  part  of any reserve fund to any other reserve fund established
   44  pursuant to this section.
   45    5. Whenever the [voters] SCHOOL AUTHORITIES shall determine  that  the
   46  original  purpose  for  which  a reserve fund has been established is no
   47  longer desirable, [the school authorities] THEY may liquidate  the  fund
   48  by  first  applying  its proceeds to any outstanding bonded indebtedness
   49  and applying the balance, if any, to  the  annual  tax  levy,  provided,
   50  however, that the amount so applied in any one year shall not be greater
   51  than the amount which will reduce the tax rate for school purposes below
   52  five  mills  on  actual  valuation;  provided,  however, that the school
   53  authorities in any school district having no outstanding bonded  indebt-
   54  edness  may,  in any year in which no state aid is payable thereto under
   55  the provisions of this chapter, liquidate  such  fund  by  applying  the
   56  balance  thereof  to the annual tax levy, regardless of the tax rate for
       S. 5                               26                               A. 5
    1  school purposes[, subject to the approval of a majority of the qualified
    2  electors of the district voting on a proposition therefor submitted at a
    3  regular or special school district meeting, or in school districts which
    4  do not have such meetings, at an election called for such purpose].
    5    S 24. The general municipal law is amended by adding a new section 3-c
    6  to read as follows:
    7    S  3-C.   LIMITATION UPON REAL PROPERTY TAXES OF LOCAL GOVERNMENTS. 1.
    8  UNLESS OTHERWISE PROVIDED BY LAW, THE AMOUNT OF REAL PROPERTY TAXES THAT
    9  MAY BE LEVIED BY OR ON BEHALF OF ANY LOCAL GOVERNMENT,  OTHER  THAN  THE
   10  CITY  OF  NEW  YORK AND THE COUNTIES CONTAINED THEREIN, SHALL NOT EXCEED
   11  THE TAX LEVY LIMITATION ESTABLISHED PURSUANT TO THIS SECTION.
   12    2. WHEN USED IN THIS SECTION:
   13    (A) "ALLOWABLE LEVY GROWTH FACTOR" SHALL BE THE LESSER OF: (I) ONE AND
   14  FOUR ONE HUNDREDTHS; OR (II) THE SUM OF  ONE  PLUS  ONE  HUNDRED  TWENTY
   15  PERCENT  OF  THE  INFLATION  FACTOR;  PROVIDED, HOWEVER, THAT IN NO CASE
   16  SHALL THE LEVY GROWTH FACTOR BE LESS THAN ONE.
   17    (B) "COMING FISCAL YEAR" MEANS THE FISCAL YEAR OF THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT
   18  FOR WHICH A TAX LEVY LIMITATION SHALL BE  DETERMINED  PURSUANT  TO  THIS
   19  SECTION.
   20    (C)  "INFLATION  FACTOR" MEANS THE QUOTIENT OF: (I) THE AVERAGE OF THE
   21  NATIONAL CONSUMER PRICE INDEXES DETERMINED BY THE UNITED STATES  DEPART-
   22  MENT OF LABOR FOR THE TWELVE MONTH PERIOD ENDING SIX MONTHS PRIOR TO THE
   23  START  OF  THE  COMING  FISCAL  YEAR  MINUS  THE AVERAGE OF THE NATIONAL
   24  CONSUMER PRICE INDEXES DETERMINED BY  THE  UNITED  STATE  DEPARTMENT  OF
   25  LABOR  FOR  THE TWELVE-MONTH PERIOD ENDING SIX MONTHS PRIOR TO THE START
   26  OF THE PRIOR FISCAL YEAR, DIVIDED BY: (II) THE AVERAGE OF  THE  NATIONAL
   27  CONSUMER  PRICE  INDEXES  DETERMINED  BY THE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF
   28  LABOR FOR THE TWELVE-MONTH PERIOD ENDING SIX MONTHS PRIOR TO  THE  START
   29  OF THE PRIOR FISCAL YEAR, WITH THE RESULT EXPRESSED AS A DECIMAL TO FOUR
   30  PLACES.
   31    (D)  "LOCAL  GOVERNMENT"  MEANS  A  COUNTY,  CITY, TOWN, VILLAGE, FIRE
   32  DISTRICT, OR SPECIAL DISTRICT INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED  TO  A  DISTRICT
   33  CREATED  PURSUANT  TO ARTICLES TWELVE, TWELVE-A, TWELVE-C OR THIRTEEN OF
   34  THE TOWN LAW, ARTICLES FIVE-A, FIVE-B OR FIVE-D OF THE COUNTY LAW, CHAP-
   35  TER FIVE HUNDRED SIXTEEN OF THE LAWS OF NINETEEN  HUNDRED  TWENTY-EIGHT,
   36  OR  CHAPTER  TWO  HUNDRED  SEVENTY-THREE OF THE LAWS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED
   37  THIRTY-NINE, BUT SHALL NOT INCLUDE THE CITY OF NEW YORK OR THE  COUNTIES
   38  CONTAINED THEREIN.
   39    (E)  "PRIOR FISCAL YEAR" MEANS THE FISCAL YEAR OF THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT
   40  IMMEDIATELY PRECEDING THE COMING FISCAL YEAR.
   41    3. (A) SUBJECT TO THE PROVISIONS OF SUBDIVISION FOUR OF THIS  SECTION,
   42  BEGINNING  WITH  THE  FISCAL YEAR THAT BEGINS IN TWO THOUSAND ELEVEN, NO
   43  LOCAL GOVERNMENT SHALL ADOPT A BUDGET THAT REQUIRES A TAX LEVY  THAT  IS
   44  GREATER THAN THE TAX LEVY LIMITATION FOR THE COMING FISCAL YEAR.
   45    (B) THE TAX LEVY LIMITATION APPLICABLE TO THE COMING FISCAL YEAR SHALL
   46  BE DETERMINED AS FOLLOWS:
   47    (I)  ASCERTAIN  THE  TOTAL AMOUNT OF TAXES LEVIED FOR THE PRIOR FISCAL
   48  YEAR.
   49    (II) ADD ANY PAYMENTS IN LIEU OF TAXES THAT  WERE  RECEIVABLE  IN  THE
   50  PRIOR FISCAL YEAR.
   51    (III) MULTIPLY THE RESULT BY THE ALLOWABLE LEVY GROWTH FACTOR.
   52    (IV)  SUBTRACT  ANY PAYMENTS IN LIEU OF TAXES RECEIVABLE IN THE COMING
   53  FISCAL YEAR.
   54    (C) THE STATE COMPTROLLER SHALL CALCULATE THE TAX LEVY LIMITATION  FOR
   55  EACH  LOCAL  GOVERNMENT  BY  THE ONE HUNDRED TWENTIETH DAY PRECEDING THE
       S. 5                               27                               A. 5
    1  COMMENCEMENT OF EACH LOCAL GOVERNMENT'S FISCAL YEAR,  AND  SHALL  NOTIFY
    2  EACH LOCAL GOVERNMENT OF THE TAX LEVY LIMITATION SO DETERMINED.
    3    4. A LOCAL GOVERNMENT MAY ADOPT A BUDGET THAT REQUIRES A TAX LEVY THAT
    4  IS GREATER THAN THE TAX LEVY LIMITATION FOR THE COMING FISCAL YEAR, ONLY
    5  IF  THE  GOVERNING  BODY  OF  SUCH  LOCAL  GOVERNMENT FIRST ENACTS, BY A
    6  TWO-THIRDS VOTE OF THE TOTAL VOTING POWER OF SUCH BODY, A LOCAL  LAW  TO
    7  OVERRIDE  SUCH  LIMITATION  FOR  SUCH COMING FISCAL YEAR ONLY, OR IN THE
    8  CASE OF A DISTRICT OR FIRE DISTRICT, A RESOLUTION TO OVERRIDE SUCH LIMI-
    9  TATION FOR SUCH COMING FISCAL YEAR ONLY.
   10    5. (A) WHEN TWO OR MORE LOCAL GOVERNMENTS CONSOLIDATE, THE STATE COMP-
   11  TROLLER SHALL DETERMINE THE TAX LEVY  LIMITATION  FOR  THE  CONSOLIDATED
   12  LOCAL  GOVERNMENT  BASED  ON  THE RESPECTIVE TAX LEVY LIMITATIONS OF THE
   13  COMPONENT LOCAL GOVERNMENTS THAT FORMED SUCH CONSOLIDATED LOCAL  GOVERN-
   14  MENT FROM THE LAST FISCAL YEAR PRIOR TO THE CONSOLIDATION.
   15    (B)  WHEN  A  LOCAL  GOVERNMENT DISSOLVES, THE STATE COMPTROLLER SHALL
   16  DETERMINE THE TAX LEVY LIMITATION FOR THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT THAT  ASSUMES
   17  THE  DEBTS, LIABILITIES, AND OBLIGATIONS OF SUCH DISSOLVED LOCAL GOVERN-
   18  MENT BASED ON THE RESPECTIVE TAX  LEVY  LIMITATIONS  OF  SUCH  DISSOLVED
   19  LOCAL  GOVERNMENT  AND  SUCH  LOCAL  GOVERNMENT  THAT ASSUMES THE DEBTS,
   20  LIABILITIES, AND OBLIGATIONS OF SUCH DISSOLVED LOCAL GOVERNMENT FROM THE
   21  LAST FISCAL YEAR PRIOR TO THE DISSOLUTION.
   22    (C) THE TAX LIMITATION ESTABLISHED BY THIS SECTION SHALL NOT APPLY  TO
   23  THE  FIRST  FISCAL YEAR AFTER A LOCAL GOVERNMENT IS NEWLY ESTABLISHED OR
   24  CONSTITUTED. THE PRECEDING SENTENCE SHALL NOT APPLY TO LOCAL GOVERNMENTS
   25  RESULTING FROM A CONSOLIDATION OR DISSOLUTION.
   26    6. IN THE EVENT A LOCAL GOVERNMENT'S  ACTUAL  TAX  LEVY  FOR  A  GIVEN
   27  FISCAL  YEAR  EXCEEDS THE MAXIMUM ALLOWABLE LEVY AS ESTABLISHED PURSUANT
   28  TO THIS SECTION DUE TO CLERICAL OR TECHNICAL ERRORS, THE  LOCAL  GOVERN-
   29  MENT  SHALL PLACE THE EXCESS AMOUNT OF THE LEVY IN RESERVE IN ACCORDANCE
   30  WITH SUCH REQUIREMENTS AS THE STATE COMPTROLLER MAY PRESCRIBE, AND SHALL
   31  USE SUCH FUNDS AND ANY INTEREST EARNED THEREON TO OFFSET  THE  TAX  LEVY
   32  FOR THE ENSUING FISCAL YEAR.
   33    S  25. This act shall take effect immediately and shall first apply to
   34  the levy of taxes by school districts for the 2011-2012 school year  and
   35  to  school district meetings and elections held on and after such effec-
   36  tive date; provided, however,  that  sections  eight,  fifteen,  twenty,
   37  twenty-one  and  twenty-two  of this act shall take effect July 1, 2011;
   38  and provided further, that section twenty-four of this act  shall  first
   39  apply  to  the  levy of   taxes by local governments for the fiscal year
   40  that begins in 2011.
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