News and Announcements » A Joint Letter from the Superintendents and Treasurers of Butler County

A Joint Letter from the Superintendents and Treasurers of Butler County

Logos that represent each of the 10 school districts in Butler County.

November 21, 2025


Dear Butler County Families, Friends, and Neighbors,

We know property taxes feel high right now — because they are. Seniors on fixed incomes worry 
about staying in their homes. Families are stretching budgets. Local businesses are feeling the strain. 
We understand, and we feel it too. Like you, we want real solutions that help families and protect our 
community’s future.
As your local school superintendents and treasurers, we write not as politicians, but as parents, 
neighbors, and community members. We work hard to use your tax dollars wisely while ensuring our 
children receive the education they deserve.
Property taxes are the symptom, not the cause. The real problem is that the state has changed how 
schools and local services are funded. Over time, the state has taken on less of the cost, pushing 
more of the burden onto homeowners and farmers. Now, several new bills in Columbus could take 
millions of dollars from Butler County schools with no plan to replace it.

How We Got Here

For years, state leaders have made tax changes that shifted the load from businesses to families, 
leaving homeowners to fund more of our schools, safety, and services.
Here are the facts:
• The State’s share of school funding has gone down over time.
• Ohio now ranks 45th in the nation for how much the State spends on public education.
• Homeowners and farmers now pay nearly 70% of school property taxes, up from 47% in 1991.
• Ohio is now 8th in the nation for property tax burden while ranking 42nd for per-person state 
taxes.
Families are paying more while the State pays less. Instead of fixing the broken system, some leaders 
want to cut school funding further — blaming schools instead of addressing the real problem.

This Impacts More Than School

Property taxes also fund the services that keep Butler County a safe and thriving place to live:
• Police, fire, and EMS
• Roads and bridges
• Libraries, parks, and senior services
• Local government operations

If property taxes were cut or removed completely, these vital services would be at risk. We agree 
taxes must be fair and affordable, but ending them would hurt every part of our community.

Our Children and Communities Deserve Better

Every child in Butler County deserves great teachers, safe schools, and learning opportunities that 
prepare them for the future. These are not extras — they are investments in our local economy and 
in our children’s success.
Schools are not overspending. They have been cutting costs, sharing services, and doing more with 
less for years. When schools are underfunded, it hurts more than classrooms. It affects jobs, home 
values, and the strength of our local economy.

A Call for Real, Balanced Reform

We are not asking anyone to accept the way things are. We are asking for fair and responsible reform 
that helps families without hurting schools and vital services.


Real reform should include:
• Relief for those who need it most — like seniors, low-income families, and people with disabilities.
• Limits on rapid tax increases — so families can plan and afford their homes.
• More State support — to pay their fair share for schools and community services.
• Transparency and accountability — so communities understand how their money is being used.

Moving Forward Together

We all want a system that works for families, protects services, and keeps our communities strong. 
Butler County can help lead that effort.

Here’s how you can help:
• Learn about what really causes property taxes to rise.
• Ask your state lawmakers to fix the funding system.
• Share the facts with friends and neighbors.
• Speak up for reform, not repeal.

Our schools, services, homes, and children’s futures are too important to risk on short-term fixes. 
Together, we can build a fair property tax system that works for everyone.


With Gratitude and Commitment,

Butler County School Superintendents and Treasurers

 

District         Superintendent  Treasurer/CFO
Butler County Educational Service Center Jeff Brandt & Chris Brown  Ken Ulm
Butler Tech    William Sprankles  Paul Carpenter
Edgewood City Schools Curtis Philpot  Patti Bowers
Fairfield City Schools  Billy Smith  Jay Phillips
Hamilton City Schools Andrea Blevins Jeremy Frazier
Lakota Local Schools  Ashley Whitely Adam Zink
Madison Local Schools  Jeff Staggs  Tearalee Frederick
Middletown City Schools Deborah Houser Randall R. Bertram                  
Monroe Local Schools  J. Robert Buskirk  Amy Moore
New Miami Local Schools Rhonda Parker          Robin Bonar
Ross Local Schools  William Rice  Steve Castator
Talawanda City Schools Edward Theroux Shaunna Tafelski

  Joint letter from superintendents and treasurers about property tax reform and the impact on school funding.                              

**To download and print this letter, please select the file below. 

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