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On November 5, Vote! Your vote matters.

A referendum on the November 5, 2024, ballot will ask voters whether to continue the half-cent sales tax for district capital needs for ten years.

Half-Cent Sales Tax History Video


A community effort led to a half-cent sales tax for school construction and maintenance in Florida’s Orange County Public Schools in 2002. The tax, which has funded the replacement or renovation of 136 schools, was extended in 2014 and will be on the ballot again in November 2024.

Key Points
  • A ‘for’ vote would continue an existing, crucial source of funding for school construction, renovation, and technology, including improvements for safety and security.

  • More than 50% of the half-cent sales tax is funded by tourists and non-residents.

  • Since 2011, OCPS has built or rebuilt 64 schools, nearly 30% of schools constructed by school districts in the state of Florida.

  • A ‘against’ vote would delay needed new campuses, put off necessary repairs to existing schools and return OCPS to a greater reliance on portable classrooms.

  • Orange County has a 6.5% sales tax, lower than some neighboring counties (Seminole at 7% and Osceola at 7.5%). A ‘for’ vote would keep the current rate with no increase.

  • Over the past two decades, the Florida Legislature has dramatically decreased the funding for school district’s building and maintenance programs.

  • The half-cent sales tax referendum will be the last item on the Nov. 5 ballot.
History
  • In 2002, community partners joined the district to address a lack of funding for new schools and campus improvements. The half-cent passed with 59.3% approval.

  • The sales tax was continued by Orange County voters in August 2014, with 64% in favor.

  • The independent, all-volunteer Citizens’ Construction Oversight and Value Engineering (COVE) Committee has monitored, reviewed and provided input on the school construction program since 1997, and has been part of the half-cent sales tax effort since the beginning.

Benefits
  • At least 136 schools have been or will be rebuilt or renovated by the current sales tax.

  • Revenues from the half-cent have funded the OCPS Capital Renewal Program since 2014 to replace major systems such as air conditioning and roofing.

  • Portable usage has dropped by about 75% due to the construction of new schools.

  • Before the sales tax, the average age of our K-12 schools was 32 years. It is now 13 years.
Rationale
  • The current half-cent sales tax is set to expire at the end of 2025.

  • If the revenue isn’t extended, building program needs will exceed projected revenues by more than $4 billion through 2035.

  • School construction funds cannot be used for general expenses such as teacher raises.

Resources

Half-Cent Sales Tax FAQ Flyer 
How does OCPS use the half-cent sales tax? Why is it on the ballot Nov. 5? Learn more here.

Spanish Version

Portuguese Version

Haitian Creole Version

Vietnamese Version

Arabic Version

List of OCPS Schools Needing Renovations by 2035
These schools will be at least 25 years old by 2035 and in need renovation or replacement.

2002 Sales Tax List of 136
This is the list of 136 projects approved by Orange County voters in 2002 as part of the initial sales tax ballot measure. Some of the schools were closed or projects combined. Voters renewed the tax in 2014. To date, sales tax funds have been used to fund 136 school construction projects, including some that were not on the original list.

Ballot Language

One-half cent sales surtax for school facilities construction, improvement, land acquisition, and technology implementation.

Shall the School Board of Orange County, Florida continue the one-half cent sales surtax to fund the construction, reconstruction and improvement of school facilities, and land acquisition, land improvement, design and engineering costs, including any bond indebtedness, and the cost of retrofitting and providing technology implementation, beginning January 1, 2026 and ending December 31, 2035, shared proportionately with charter schools as legally required, with continued oversight by an independent citizens’ committee?

____ for the one-half cent tax
____ against the one-half cent tax

Spanish Version

Portuguese Version

Haitian-Creole Version

Vietnamese Version

Arabic Version

School Board Resolution

Important Dates

October 2 - Local Vote-by-Mail begins

October 7 - Deadline to register to vote

October 21 - November 3 - Early voting

November 5 - General Election Day