Posted on 12/22/2014 5:01:36 AM PST by thackney
The state agency responsible for building and maintaining Wyomings K-12 schools will face huge revenue shortfalls in the years ahead. Thats according to a report by University of Wyoming economists.
The vast majority of school construction funding comes from coal lease bonus paymentsand those revenues are expected to dry up completely in 2017.
The School Facilities Department expects to spend half as much in 2019 and 2020 as its spending nowas the state shifts from building schools to maintaining them. But in the same period, the associated revenues are expected to drop by 95 percent.
The UW report found that the state needs to come up with just under $700 million between 2017 and 2022 to make up for the revenue losses. Rob Godby at UWs Center for Energy Economics and Public Policy worked on the report. He says the end of coal lease bonuses isnt cause for panic.
The sky is not falling, says Godby. Coal lease bonuses were kind of icing on the cake. They were big sources of revenue but they come and they go. We just have to figure out how were going to pay for things because the old revenue streams that we used for that are no longer there.
Godby says the state has a number of revenue optionsincluding investments, severance taxes and a mill levy, but his team didnt advocate any one option. Instead, they simply present the revenue picture to help lawmakers make an informed policy decision.
There is a slight revenue surplus expected for the next two years, thanks to the last of the coal lease bonus money.
It’s regrettable that Wyoming residents cannot take advantage of the benefit from their natural resources.
My only advice to Wyoming would be, don’t try to recoup the money lost by succumbing to more US Government bribery in the form of school grants, etc. in exchange for “obeying the rules”......
More hope and change....
Of course Clinton putting all those low-sulfer coal deposits off limits has nothing to do with it.
I would say you are correct.
I do not see how locking up a coal area in Utah has hurt the ability to produce coal in Wyoming.
As back in the days when turntables were king, like a skipping record, “for the children ... (Click) ... for the children ... “ will be all that will be heard about this.
It is all interconnected in creating the atmosphere of policy that coal is evil and must be eliminated. Typical dishonest lefty acts.
You are right, I was off by one state.
Haha, got that right. The dam “schools” are a financial black hole.
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