/ Categories: Research, Broward BOC

Monitoring and Oversight of General Obligation Bonds to Improve Broward County Schools: Q3 2021-22

SMART Program Quarterly Report Review for the Quarter Ended March 31, 2022

As Florida TaxWatch reports the Broward Public School District’s progress in implementing the SMART Program for the quarter ended March 31, 2022, the school year will have ended and students will have begun their summer break. The May 24 mass murder of 19 students and two adults at an elementary school in Texas will undoubtedly weigh heavily on the minds of Broward students and their families as the 2022-23 school year approaches.

The safety and security component of the SMART Program includes projects designed to limit access to each school through a single point-of-entry, which are in place at all Broward County public schools. Other safety and security projects include fire alarms and sprinklers, emergency exit signage/lighting improvements, fencing, and door hardware. These improvements are bundled together as part of active Primary Renovations projects, many of which are behind their original schedule and over their original budget. Florida TaxWatch is taking a “deeper dive” into the status of the outstanding safety and security projects.

Higher rates of inflation, higher roofing and mechanical/electrical/fire protection costs, and items that were excluded from the original scopes of work will undoubtedly continue to increase the costs of the active Primary Renovations projects. Florida TaxWatch considers controlling project costs and mitigating the additional financial risk to be the greatest challenge facing the District at this point as SMART Program implementation moves forward.

Florida TaxWatch is pleased to present the following report, which includes the Florida TaxWatch review of the District’s Bond Oversight Committee Quarterly Report for the Quarter Ended March 31, 2022. 

Documents to download

Previous Article The Economic and Fiscal Impacts of Education and Training Beyond High School in Florida
Next Article BUILT FOR SUCCESS: MANUFACTURING’S ROLE IN FLORIDA’S ECONOMY
Print
4869
0Upvote 0Downvote
«June 2026»
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
25262728293031
1
Florida TaxWatch Provides Analysis of the Governor’s Property Tax Amendment and Legislation, Recommends Florida Taxation and Budget Reform Commission Lead Debate

Florida TaxWatch Provides Analysis of the Governor’s Property Tax Amendment and Legislation, Recommends Florida Taxation and Budget Reform Commission Lead Debate

The Florida Legislature is meeting in special session to consider Governor DeSantis’ proposed constitutional amendment and linked legislation to provide significant property tax relief to Florida homeowners. The proposal has many provisions, but the main ones would increase the homestead exemption to $150,000, beginning January 1, 2027, and then increase it to $250,000, beginning January 1, 2028. This exemption will apply to all property taxes. In addition, the cap on the annual increase in the assessment of non-homestead properties would be reduced from 10% to 5%, but this change would not apply to school property tax levies. Any property taxes remaining after the changes would be restricted to being used solely for core services such as public safety, education, infrastructure, debt, and retirement benefits.

Read more
234567
8
2026 Budget Turkey Watch Report

2026 Budget Turkey Watch Report

Since 1983, Florida TaxWatch has published this annual independent review of the state budget to promote oversight, integrity, and transparency in the appropriations process. This year’s review of Florida’s $114.5 billion budget for FY2026-27 identifies 621 items totaling $829.7 million that qualify as “Budget Turkeys.” In addition to projects that qualify as Budget Turkeys, this report highlights other areas in the budget that contain numerous member projects that, while they do not strictly meet our Budget Turkey criteria, certainly merit extra scrutiny and close gubernatorial review.  These additional 484 projects total $441.1 million.
The principle behind the Budget Turkey Watch Report is simple: taxpayer dollars should be allocated through a transparent, accountable, and deliberative processes. All appropriations, especially projects requested by individual legislators, should be subject to rigorous public review. This is especially important since these are typically projects that are local rather than statewide in scope and are often outside the core functions of state government.

Read more
91011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293012345

Archive