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Forest Hills voters to decide May 6 on non-homestead millage

District — Forest Hills voters will be asked on May 6 to renew an 18-mill non-homestead millage levied on properties such as rentals, vacation homes, businesses and commercial property.

The district also is asking to levy an additional 0.5 on non-homestead properties to buffer against the Headlee rollback, said Julie Davis, Forest Hills assistant superintendent for finance and operations. The requests would have no impact on primary residences.

According to the 1978 Headlee Amendment, the growth of taxable values is limited to the lesser of either the inflation rate or 5%. The passage of the additional 0.5 mill would allow the district to go six years before having to seek another renewal, Davis said.

The non-homestead millage makes up part of school district funding. Districts collect the 18 mills, and the amount collected is subtracted from the total amount of what the district would receive from the state for its funding allowance.

The non-homestead represents about $24 million annually for Forest Hills, making up about 18% of the district’s $133 million budget. If the renewal is not approved by voters, the state will not replace the money and Forest Hills will be forced to reduce or cut programs to offset the loss, according to the district’s website

Davis noted that while the millage request has no impact on primary residences, all registered voters in the Forest Hills district can vote on the issue. 

Read more from Forest Hills: 
Junior kindergarten to start next year
No cell phones in class? It’s a good thing, student and principal say

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Joanne Bailey-Boorsma
Joanne Bailey-Boorsma
Joanne Bailey-Boorsma is a reporter covering Kent ISD, Godwin Heights, Kelloggsville, Forest Hills and Comstock Park. The salutatorian for the Hartland Public Schools class of 1985, she changed her colors from blue and maize to green and white by attending Michigan State University, where she majored in journalism. Joanne moved to the Grand Rapids area in 1989, where she started her journalism career at the Advance Newspapers. She later became the editor for On-the-Town magazine, a local arts and entertainment publication. Her husband, Mike, works the General Motors plant in Wyoming; her oldest daughter, Kara, is a registered nurse working in Holland, and her youngest, Maggie, is studying music at Oakland University. She is a volunteer for the Van Singel Fine Arts Advisory Board and the Kent District Library. In her free time, Joanne enjoys spending time with her family, checking out local theater and keeping up with all the exchange students they have hosted through the years.

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