Glenn v. Morrow County Unified Recreation District

14 Or. Tax 344, 1998 Ore. Tax LEXIS 27
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedJuly 17, 1998
DocketTC 4211
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 14 Or. Tax 344 (Glenn v. Morrow County Unified Recreation District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glenn v. Morrow County Unified Recreation District, 14 Or. Tax 344, 1998 Ore. Tax LEXIS 27 (Or. Super. Ct. 1998).

Opinion

CARL N. BYERS, Judge.

Petitioner is an interested taxpayer challenging Respondent’s categorization of its 1997-98 property tax levy, a categorization required by Article XI, section lib, of the Oregon Constitution. Respondent categorized its levy of $450,000 as for “Other Than School Taxes.” For the same year, Respondent budgeted $451,792 for “school district activities” to be paid to the Morrow County School District under an intergovernmental agreement. Petitioner claims that such taxes are in fact being used to provide educational services and are therefore subject to that constitutional limitation.

FACTS

Article XI, section lib, of the Oregon Constitution (section lib), was enacted by initiative measure at the general election in November 1990. It imposed new limits on property taxes, distinguishing between taxes used to fund the public school system and taxes used to fund governmental operations other than the public school system. Taxes used to fund government operations, other than the public school system, are limited to $10 for each $1,000 of real market value. The limitation on taxes used to fund the public school system was initially $15 for each $1,000 of value but decreased $2.50 each year until it reached its permanent limitation of $5 per $1,000 in the 1995-96 year.

One general effect of section lib was to reduce school revenues. On April 18, 1994, the Morrow County School District implemented certain steps to reduce its expenditures. Most notably, it reduced school to four days per week, with no classes held on Friday. It lost nine and one-half teaching positions and eliminated home economics and driver’s education. The school board proposed elimination of almost all cocurricular activities not mandated by the State Board of Education. Most of these activities concerned interscholastic athletics, drama productions, and music programs.

*347 In 1992, the state Deputy Superintendent of Public Instruction asked the Oregon Attorney General four questions concerning the use of a parks and recreation district to help fund cocurricular activities. The Attorney General’s opinion indicates that a park and recreation district can enter into an intergovernmental agreement with a school district under which the park and recreation district would reimburse the school district for providing recreational activity. The opinion indicates that it does not matter that the school district previously provided the same services, such as interscholastic athletics, drama production, and music programs. The opinion also indicates that as long as the park and recreation district tax levy is not “solely” for the purpose of funding educational services, it will be subject to the $10 limit and not the $5 limit. After becoming aware of the Attorney General’s opinion, concerned citizens of Morrow County gathered signatures and petitioned the county court to approve the formation of a recreation district. The court granted the Petition and Respondent was organized.

On September 19, 1995, Morrow County voters approved a three-year serial levy for Respondent. On November 13,1995, Respondent entered into an intergovernmental agreement with the Morrow County School District. Under the agreement, Respondent will reimburse the school district for providing services which are essentially the same cocurricular activities the school district previously provided out of its own budget. The agreement specifies that none of Respondent’s money is to be used by the school district for courses of study required by statute or rules of the State Board of Education or for supplemental courses.

Beginning with the 1995-96 tax year, Respondent levied a tax of $450,000 per year for three years. However, Petitioner’s complaint addresses only the 1997-98 levy and is, therefore, the only year before the court. Petitioner alleges, and Respondent admits, that Respondent categorized its levy as for “Other than School Taxes.” At the same time, Respondent budgeted $451,792 for “School district Activities,” to be paid to the Morrow County School District under its intergovernmental agreement with the district. A Department of Revenue Form LB 30, attached to Petitioner’s complaint, *348 shows that Respondent’s total budget for the 1997-98 year was $583,292.

The evidence at trial established two additional significant points: First, Respondent’s tax levy is not used solely to fund cocurricular activities of the school district. Respondent conducts a number of other recreational programs and activities for the benefit of citizens of all ages and categories. Second, interscholastic athletics at the high school level are governed by the Oregon Schools’ Activities Association (OSAA), a nonprofit corporation, whose activities are sanctioned and subject to approval by the State Board of Education. OSAA rules govern interscholastic competitions and include requirements for students with regard to attendance, grades, and conduct. Although only 75 percent of the high schools in the state are members of OSAA, only members are allowed to participate in league play and championship competitions. A park and recreation district cannot be a member of OSAA.

ISSUES

1. Are the cocurricular activities provided by the Morrow County School District “educational services”?

2. If Respondent’s tax levy is used to fund educational services, then is it subject to the constitutional limitation on revenues used to fund the public school system?

ANALYSIS

In imposing dollar limits on property taxes, Article XI, section lib, specifies that:

“Property tax revenues are deemed to be dedicated to funding the public school system if the revenues are to be used exclusively for educational services, including support services, provided by some unit of government, at any level from pre-kindergarten through post-graduate training.”

The constitution does not define “educational services.” However, the legislature has enacted statutes implementing section lib and, in doing so, defines educational services for pin-pose of those statutes. ORS SlO.lSSCd) 1 provides:

*349 “As used in this section, ‘educational services’ includes:
“(a) Establishment and maintenance of pre-schools, kindergartens, elementary schools, high schools, community colleges and institutions of higher education.
“(b) Establishment and maintenance of career schools, adult education programs, evening school programs and schools or facilities for the physically, mentally or emotionally disabled.”

ORS 310.155(6) indicates that educational services does not include:

“[C]ommunity recreation programs, civic activities, public libraries, programs for custody or care of children or community welfare activities if those programs or activities are provided to the general public and not for the benefit of students

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 Or. Tax 344, 1998 Ore. Tax LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glenn-v-morrow-county-unified-recreation-district-ortc-1998.