Brandon School Division proposes to hike education property taxes by almost 3% - Action News
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Manitoba

Brandon School Division proposes to hike education property taxes by almost 3%

The Brandon School Division is joining other Manitoba school boards moving toward raisingits portion of property taxes for the coming school year.

Recommended increase comes after city approved 9.4% jump in property taxes

A school board sits at a round table.
The Brandon school board during a Brandon School Division board meeting on Oct. 23, 2023. The division unveiled the draft of its 2024-25 budget earlier this week. (Chelsea Kemp/CBC)

The Brandon School Division is joining other Manitoba school boards moving toward raisingproperty taxes for the coming school year.

The division would be increasing education property taxes by 2.96 per cent, according to a draft ofthe 2024-25 school budgetunveiled Thursday. That would amountto a net annual increase of $25.36 on an average single family home valued at $281,000, the division said.

Earlier this month, the provincial NDP announced earlier it was letting school divisions raise property taxes, ending the multi-year freeze put in place by the former Progressive Conservative government.

About a week ago, the Winnipeg School Division and the Pembina Trails School Division, proposed 3.4 per cent and three per cent hikes on property taxes, respectively. Both school boards citedthe need to keep up with rising costs as one of the reasons behind the increases.

The Brandon School Division's draft includes four per cent increases inits capital, maintenance and instructional supplies budgets to match inflation.

Itprojects a total of 9,804 students for the 2024-25 school year an increase of 112 studentsas well as23.38 newfull-time-equivalent teaching positions and 11.48 new FTE support staff roles. There's also money set aside to make division schools more accessible, to replace their paging systems,and for the maintenance of aging facilities.

The division's 2.96 per cent hike would be on top of the 9.4 per cent increase Brandon city council approved for its own property tax earlier this year.

Mayor Jeff Fawcett said then that while the increase was a hard pill to swallow for residents, it was necessary to stabilize the city's finances.

The school division is holding consultations on the draft budget on March 4, with the final approval slated for March 11.