/ Categories: Research, Broward BOC

Q2 2019-20 Broward Schools SMART Program Report Review

On February 22, 2020, Florida TaxWatch received the Bond Oversight Committee Quarterly Report for the Quarter Ended December 31, 2019 (“Quarterly Report”). This single 866-page report provides updated information on the implementation of the District’s SMART Program and the use of general obligation bond funds to purchase and install technology upgrades, purchase music, and art equipment, improve safety, upgrade athletic facilities, and renovate educational facilities. 

The Quarterly Report consists of an Introduction and the following eight sections: 

Section 1 ---Technology School Board Broward County (SBBC) Schools; 

Section 2 --- Technology Charter Schools; 

Section 3 --- Music & Art Equipment; 

Section 4 --- Athletics; 

Section 5 --- Facilities; 

Section 6 --- Budget Activity; 

Section 7 --- Supplier Diversity Outreach Program; and 

Section 8 --- Communications. 

The School Board of Broward County has provided guidance to the Bond Oversight Committee in Section 4 of Resolution 15-106 (as amended). In reviewing quarterly reports prepared by District staff, the Committee is charged with: 

Verifying the effective use of bond proceeds and compliance with the purposes set forth in the bond programs as approved by the Board; 

Ensuring that bond revenues are expended for the purpose set forth in the bond programs as approved by the Board; 

Ensuring that any deferred proposals or changes of plans are executed after appropriate approval of the Board; 

Validating that no bond funds are used for any teacher or administrative salaries or other school operating expense; and 

Reviewing efforts by District staff to maximize bond revenues by balancing best value, quality, and efficiency in meeting the bond programs as approved by the Board. 

To encourage greater accountability, transparency, public support, and confidence in the use of the general obligation bond funds, Florida TaxWatch has reviewed this report against the most recent SMART Program budget. TaxWatch is pleased to present the following report and recommendations.

Documents to download

Previous Article Session Spotlight - Provisions in the House Tax Package & Corresponding Senate Legislation
Next Article What’s In and What’s Out of the Final 2020 Tax Package
Print
3066
0Upvote 0Downvote
«September 2025»
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
25262728
Government Efficiency Should Not Be Something We Do Every Four Years

Government Efficiency Should Not Be Something We Do Every Four Years

Florida has proven ideas, demonstrated wins, and active tools; now it needs permanence. By embedding efficiency into the annual budget cycle—backed by transparent tracking and regular reporting—the state can convert sporadic initiatives into sustained savings and better service delivery for taxpayers.

Read more
293031
12
Apportionment Changes Amid Policy Proposals

Apportionment Changes Amid Policy Proposals

Apportionment Changes Amid Policy Proposals explains how Florida’s 2020 Census undercount—about 750,000 residents (3.48%)—reduced the state’s political representation and likely cost billions of dollars in federal funding over the decade. The report examines what Florida stood to gain if the count had been accurate and how proposed changes to who is counted could affect future apportionment.

Read more
34
The Taxpayer's Guide to Florida's FY2025-26 State Budget

The Taxpayer's Guide to Florida's FY2025-26 State Budget

Florida TaxWatch’s The Taxpayers’ Guide to Florida’s FY2025-26 State Budget explains the Legislature’s $114.8 billion spending plan (after $376 million in line-item vetoes)—a 3.2% decrease from FY2024-25—while maintaining $12.6 billion in reserves. General Revenue (GR) spending rises by $556 million, and the recurring GR base increases by $1.9 billion, even as total positions fall to 111,886 (-1,871).

Read more
567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293012345

Archive